fie THE PONTIAC PRE The Weather c wuss tes Bureau Forecast "eat Oval oa “16th YEAR kk kkk oral PR aEeaon, t DOUBLE DELIGHT — Can't queen without a score card as Miss Michigan, Patience Pierce, of Detroit, left, tell the beauty poses with her 2 Southern Belles in Fore Two Aré Better Than One AP Wirephote twin sister, Patricia, at Atlantic City where Patience is vying for the Miss America title. Miss America to Be Crowned Tonight | night and start her year-long reign , as holder of the oldest national | beauty title. : * 6* * ) ‘Two Southern girls, Miss Ala- | bama and Miss North Carolina, won in the third round of prelimi- nary judging last night. They are among the 52 contenders for the 3 fame and fortune that goes to the } final winner of the Miss America ant, | Miss Alabama, a rabbit's foot | _ The Miss America pag- eant will be televised locally beginning at 10 p. m. by WJBK-TV, chan- nel 2. tucked inside’ her costume, won the night's talent competition with Presses to Roll in Detroit Today | Newspaper Strike Ends After 2 Days, in Time for Sunday Editions DETROIT (UPID—Detroit’s two- day newspaper strike ended early today, about eight hours after a one-million-dollar damage suit was filed against striking pressmen, but the city’s three daily papers won't resume publication until Sun- day editions, _ * * * The settlement came after press- men voted to return to their jobs at the conclusion of a stormy 4-% hour meeting at the labor temple. Knight Newspapers, Inc., pub- lisher of the Detroit Free Press, Ls @ morning paper, had fileg a ? million-dollar .damage _ suit against the pressmen yesterday 000 damages for each day a work stoppage “in violation of. con- tract’ continued. The strike started at the Free) Press late Wednesday when press- men refused to report for” work in protest over the firing of a union vard, v x * * All three Detroit dailies, the Free Press and the afternoon News ‘and Times, are represented in bar- \ _ gaining by the Detroit Newspaper o——=—“Byblishers* Assn and ~a~ strike against one paper is usually con- sidered a strike against all three. Thus, the News and-Times did not publish Thursday or Friday edi- tions, * * * ~ It was. the second time in 13 months that Detroit's papers were kept off the streets by strike. In August, .1957, a strike by mailers The papers were also hit by a 46-day. strike over the Christmas holiday period in 1955, : ' Watered-Down Theft. Rap yy rine 4 v Vy a MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Someone] weighs 112 pounds and mieas- ures 34-21-344,. Lee Thornberry, a-black-haired beauty from Birmingham, Ala., left her rabbit's foot. in her- hotel room and sent her chaperone back to get it at the last minute. * * * The lucky charm was stowed away inside the loose fitting sailor suit she wore during a rendition of the song and dance “Honey- bun,” performed by the character of the song and dance ‘“Honey- Nellie Forbush in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, When her name was called as & preliminary winner, Miss Thorn- berry said she “just lost all con- trol of myself. = “It was the same feeling I had when my mother bought my first pair of dancing shoes,” she said, An old child, the 21-year-old Miss Thornberry is a senior at Birmingham-Southern—€ automatically: gets a $1,000 schol- arship as a preliminary talent champion, * x * Miss Evans is the daughter of a deacon and elder at Red Oak Christian Church, named the Na- tional Rural Church of the Year in 1954. She herself is organist there. * * * In addition to swimming, the brown-haired Miss North Carolina likes singing, the piano and col- lecting stuffed animals, “I'm just glad I could do one little thing to make North Caro- PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1958 —30 PAGES | US. Marines Board Ships Southwest Formose + lke in Capital for Confab on Far East Crisis Takes Up Integration, Other Matters in Brief Vacation Departure WASHINGTON (# — President Eisenhower re- turned to the White House today for a round of talks on the Far East crisis, school integration and other matters. He flew. back from his vacation headquarters at Newport, R. I, arriving in his private plane, Colum- bine ITI. return to Newport this evening to resume his vacation. * * * Early this week it was announced that Eisenhower would return to Washington today to be host at a tion for a group of American, Brit- ish and Canadian college educa- American Assn, of Universities. Later he booked meetings with Secretary of Commerce Weeks and Secretary of Labor — and a goodbye visit with his eco adviser, Dr. Gabriel lina proud of me,”’ she said, Parson-Contestant Says; This year 17 have met death in -water-—accidents. Quiz on Video ‘Fed’ Answer — NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)—The Rev, Charles E. Jackson, of Tullahoma, Tenn., said last night he was “fed” an answer to a questfon when he was a contestant on “The . $64,000 —— television show. * * * The Rev. Jackson, who appeared on the program in December of 1957, said, however, that “you can’t accuse the people who produce these quiz shows of anything criminal. If there’s anything wrong, it’s with the American people themselves who are so unforgivably mercenary they wor- ship anyone that makes money, no matter how it’s made.” Jackson won $4,000 on “The $64,000 Question” and $16,000 on “The $64,000 Challenge.” The minister's disclosure marked the first time “The $64,000 Challenge” has been named in the current uproar over quiz show practices. In New York the district attorney’s office is investigating the now-defunct “Dotto,” “21,” and a number of other shows. WOULD BE AN IDIOT Mrs. Regan Leydenfrost sald after being questioned yes- _ terday at the district attorney’s office that “anyone would have to be an idiot not to be able to give the answers” on “Dotto.” The blonde housewife said she had won $900 on the show. Jackson said that in a briefing before he went on the air on the $64,000 Challenge, he was told by “A Miss Bernstein” that the answer to part of one question was Thomas Hood. The question, in four parts, dealt with “great love stories.” It asked the name of Christopher Marlowe’s long poem about a famous lover who had to swim to his sweet- on the Far East situation and other matters, with Secretary of State SIZE UP THREATS They will size up again the Red nese Nationalist offshore islands, and any developments since they conferred in Newport on that mat- ter for an hour and 45 minutes Thursday. The upshot of that meeting was a Dulles announcement that Ei- senhower wil] not hesitate to commit American armed forces to defense of Quemoy and other Nationalist-held islands near the China mainland—if the President decides they are essential to se- curity of the mjin Chiang Kai- shek bastion, Formosa. Late yesterday the summer White House announced Eisenhow- er-also would confer in Washington with Atty. Gen. Rogers. The con- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Cloudy, Cool Tonight; Sunday to Be Fair Partly cloudy and cooler, with showers ending, is the prediction for Pontiac tonight. The low will be near 58, Tomorrow will be fair and pleas- ant throughout Michigan with the local high reaching around 74. To- day’s southwesterly 15-30 mile an “jhour winds will become northwest tomorrow and diminish tomorrow night, Sixty-eight was the lowest tem- perature preceding 8 a.m. in down- town Pontiac. The mercury rose heart and the name of the body of water involved. to 8 at T P.m. ‘and} The President pla heaped ty span. several hours in Washington and late afternoon White House recep-| tors—members and guests of the China threats to invade the Chi-| executive secretary of the State SAFETY AWARD — For the second straight year, the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Safety Committee receives an award for its May Vehicle Safety Check. Presenting a plaque cit- ing Pontiac’s excellent participation by teenagers in the program is Gerald Shipman (center), in Michigan by Safety Commis- + Plaque for City Vehicle Check Pontiac Press Photo sion. Receiving it is Harold Marshall (right), chairman of this year’s safety check. Looking on is Leeroy W..Duncan, special representative of the Inter-Industry Highway Safety Committee. The teenage citation was the only one given out the committee, sponsor of the an - nual safety check. = American Troops oly. to Join in Maneuvers With Chiang’s Army £ ie ey -for- _— US.- TAIPEI — U.S. Marines Oakland County supervisors, con- cerned all year over soaring wel- fare relief costs, will get some re- lief themselves Monday when they meet to receive a revised 1959 county budget. The relief ‘will be in the form of a proposal of the Ways and Means Committee that, if supervisors ap- prove it, could add $451,167 to wel- fare funds. This is made possible by a May decision of the Wayne Coun- ty Circuit Court which takes an annual quarter of‘a mill alloca tion for the Huron Clinton Met- ropolitan Authority out of the 15 mill tax_limitation. The ruling thus frees the %4-mill| for some other use. Supervisors un- doubtedly will use it to help ease a forecasted year-end deficit of a million dollars ‘brought on by the increase in welfare assistance. It doesn’t eliminate entirely allo- cation of yearly sums by Oakland and four other counties to support the authority, This will be done in the future by a separate assess- ment over and above the limita- tion, officials say. Besides acting on this recom- mended shifting of funds, super- visors will receive copies of an adjusted 1959 budget based on a tax rate of $5.62 per thousand of equalized valuation set by the Tax Allocation Board in June. The budget to be presented Mon- day totals $12,235,723. Of this ie relat oy teomtion based on the, $5.62 tax rate. Expected to come from other de- partmental revenues, to balance the new budget, is $2,121,000. _* ®* * Supervisors are not expected to act on the final 1959 budget until a Sept. 15 meeting. ‘The preliminary* budget, pre- sented in April for tax ph tal giRevised County Budget to Be Studied Monday arose when Oe ee a ae (Continued on Page 2, Col, 1) Necessity of trimming the budget the Tax Allocation Board settled on the lesser rate of $5.62. The 1957 tax rate was $5 valuation, A report from the supervisors’ See, Dulles Enters Case of Negro to Die for $1.95) By ALFRED McCORMACK JR. MONTGOMERY, Ala., (UPI) — Secretary of State John Foster Dulles has entered the case of a negro sentenced to die for a $1.95 robbery of an eldetly white widow, it was disclosed yesterday. Dulles sent Gov. James E. Folsom a telegram saying there was world-wide concern for 55-year-old farm hand islands Aug. 23, no troop or supply shipment of consequences has (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Attend Sessions sentenced to die for the nighttime theft. Ralph Hammond, Folsom’s ex- ecutive secretary, reported Dulles said that U.S, embassies had re- ceived “numerous letters’? about amount, $10,164,723 is expected to the case. He said Dulles its — Deputies Ticket 100, Warn 800 Drowning © Toll Five Below. ‘1957 Figure By DICK SAUNDERS A post-Labor Day report of water accidents by the Oakland County Sheriff's Department reveals few- er drownings than last year, and the issuance of 100 tickets by the special lake patro! deputies. At this time last year 22 persons had drowned in the county's lakes. made under the ‘peetlitons « of a new Michigan beat law which went into effect Sept. 27, 1957, too late for last year’s summer boat season. Under it, all boats put in the water after March 1 had to bear a state registration number. Excep- tions were made for boats under No e Bi ings “oy 2 after Labor Day in 1957. Of the 100-tickets issued by the “| patroling lake deputies, 67 .were || for reckless operation of a motor-| | Thoat, and 16 for not having boat registration. Twelve boat operators were tick- eted for motors creating excessive noise, four for falsifying registra- tion numbers, and one man -was jailed for operating a motorboat while under the influence of liquor. : In Today's Press | Se en 116 ‘tet not ay or tem- porarily equipped with a motor. * * * Provisions covering reckless boat operation were included in the law. The deputies handed out a total of more than 800 warnings, 668 for reckless operation alone, thus pointing to the fact that they were oad ho means “ticket | peices the water patrol. - ' “The public has been quick to accept the deputies and I congratu- late every one of them for doing a splendid job during the past summer months,” he beamed. x * * The public, or a great_ majority of it, has accepted boat registra- tions too. Thus far in 1958 a total of 218,000 boat registrations have! No wikis operation case yet | tried in court has been lost by the department. , . Xo 5 a re ‘The special deputies have put in a total of 3,147 working hours on area lakes~ since Memorial Most of these hours came on week- ends and holidays. Sheriff Frank W. Irons said “We have had many letters - = hes OX “ Church News .....::..065 67 Editorials ...... decheceaery. 4 Home Section .,.......... 15-20 Sports veep eeoeene se * 22-23 Theaters .........0ssceeee 10-12 TV & Radio Programs .... 30 Wilson, Eari re eeweneeeenes 3 ye | trom various ee i eco been applied and paid for in the county, - “The registration aumbovi have been extremely valuable in boats being operated » said Deputy Donald K. Kratt, in charge of the water patrol. “They have also aided deputies in locating stolen/boats or boats which have drifted from their mooring,”” he added. Li comings is seen by law enforce- ment authorities as the result of two things: 1—cooler weather this summer, discouraging swimmers; and 2—the lake patrol. A total of seven children died playing near or in water without proper supervision; six drown- ings resulted from boating mis- haps, and four persons drowned while swimming. Jimmy Wilson who was+ the London embassy receiving *‘about 600 letters a day” and the embassy in Ireland “receiving about 400 letters a day.” Hammond said “very emphatic that he was not trying to interfere with the ju- dicial or court system of .Ala- bama but just wanted te inform the governor of what was occurr- ing throughout the world.” The governor’s aide said Folsom informed Dulles the chief execu- tive was receiving “more: than 1,000 letters a day’’ at his office here, He said Folsom “apprised 'Diillés “of thé” situation; how the case is going through the, courts and that through the division of the three branches of government he wouldn’t have jurisdiction until the State Supreme Court upheld the sentence.” -* xk * Folsom hag Said he would com- mute the death sentence to life imprisonment if the Supreme Court upholdg the death penalty. Dulles was’ Better Understanding by Both GM; UAW #8 United’ Auto Workers “Union fol- lowing yesterday’s bargaining on a new labor contract. United Auto Workers Union |President Walter P. Reuther re- joined GM negotiations for the first time since the old contract expired May-29.-GM's chie? nego- — tiator, Vice President Louis. G. Seaton, also joined in the talks. Reuther said GM made no spe- cific offer. The discussions were : —— aa. i Fe added. Seaton seid (nh ‘scullt-Balee tn weekend to analyze positions taken by the union and determine a of action. he| All of last year’s 22 drownings occurred during the summer months, from — Day to — Day. . ee @ a, tia year only 12. drownings explanation might be the sheriff's boat patrol. Their record for rescues comes close to the difference in drowning totals. Deputies havé’been credited occurred in that period. 4 “good crime in the state. Adlai Not Seeking PARIS (#—“I shall not seek the nomination,” soon Adiai- Stevenson today ‘when asked —— in the number of “4 with saving four, lives since Me- morial Day, f whether he again would run for president, - : Wilson was sentenced under Ala- bama law which makes nighttime robbery of an inhabited dwelling ta \capitifl offense, He is, the fourth ’|person sentenced to die for the Asked if he felt GM would be said: “If it comes to a point where 'Reuther, Seaton . on Contracts. Reported DETROIT #-—-A better under- # eet nag _ .. port until squalls and seas sub- _ Side.” - 1D. Perkins said heavy rain fell at) j ~ 4,000 persons, including ~ many ~ ‘Direction: Varia’ THAN a) _ House Committee Group - Folded When She Quit ‘ning actress, belonged to a com- munist front organization in Holly- “wood for two years before she found out its true nature and worked for its dissolution, a tran- 4 it E cad | > Miss de “Havilland Tells). LOS ANGELES (PD — — Olivia de Havilland, Academy Award win- Nel A'd Oakland Mennen W the Michigan State Fair. They 114 Parkdale St.; " GREETING THE GOVERNOR — These six beauties greeted Gov. s during a luncheon for them at Water Follies of 1958,'’ Carole Ann Ryden, 19, of © “Michigan State Roller Skating Queen,” Marcia Marthum, 16, of 2405 Jones St.; _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER « 6, 1958 G wood St., Queen,” Bonita are (l-r) “Miss Waterford Township; Sharon Dreyer, 17, of 3717 Ward’s Point, Orchard Lake; and “Miss Orion of 1958," Wanda Stone, 17, of 46 Shadbolt, Lake Orion. “Miss Rochester,” Donna Hohf, 18, of 366 Lin- Rochester; “Miss Romeo . Peach Brooksheer, 18, of 1651 Playsted, “Kiwanis Apple Queen,” would not hesitate to use U.S. ‘jarmed forces to insure the defense|the of Formosa “‘if he judged that cir- cumstances made this necessary.” Chou made his remarks in a broadcast beamed to domestic lis- teners in Red China, He said he had been ordered to issne a state- ment in answer to Dulles, follow- ing the secretary of state’s meet- jing with President Eisenhower at Newport, RI : “Taiwan has been Chinese ter- ritory from the distant past,” | Chou said. -. as part ‘down on ers” who geese into commercial food chan- nels. * * * Assistant U.S. Atty. John Chase Ee Eight Towns Evacuated Weary Tropical Storm Moves Gently Into Texas _ The U.S, Weather Bureau's 4 a.m, (CST) advisory, last planned- on Ella, said, “‘Lower all warn- ings, Small craft along Texas and Louisiana coasts should remain in = * * * At least eight small towns had been evacuated as Ella moved to- ward the Texas coast and about tourists, island, left Mustang The Weather oes es dees ance oe ing te Sunday nicht. High $8, low 58. morrow 7: te Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. At 8 a.m.: bins velocity 15 - 30 m.p.h. un sete Saturday at 6:58 an m. a at603. a Moon sets Bunday at 2:40 p.m. Moon rises Saturday e at 11: ve rp m Dewntewn Tem Temperatures ies enc ew li a.m..... oe ee Friday in Pontiac fas recorded downtown) pny tempersture. eee about Christi ‘cooler in the central Plains and up to 20 degrees cooler in parts of ' New England, Cooler weather was| on tap for the upper Midwest and, ' 1924. northern Great Lakés, region. * 16 miles from Corpus The storm moved inland with -Hittle- rumpus-and-at-4-a:m. {CST} was about 20 miles west of here. The Weather Bureau said winds 30 to 40 m.p.h. would continue along the Texas and extreme west Louisiana coasts today and dim- inish tonight. High tides along the coast also were expected to fall today, the Weather Bureau said. At Stinton, Tex., Patrolman H. 4:30 a.m., but southward at Kings- ville, Tex., police dispatcher C. L, Skipper said no rain was fall- ing and little wind had been felt. Perkins estimated the wind at Kingsville at 12 m.p.h. * * * Another tropical worked its way to within 600 miles of San Juan, Puerto Rico today. Gales threatened the Leeward and northern Windward Islands, east of Puerto Rico. Aircraft were ordered out at -jdaylight to pin down the position ;iof the season's sixth storm, born yesterday in the wide- open waters nearly 2,000 miles from the U.S. mainland. Two earlier storms. Becky and Cleo, gathered strength in the _.,SOMe area... 2 : Lo ame a 2 Elsewhere in the nation’s weath- er, a large pocket of thunderstorm | activity dumped heavy rains over sections of the Plains and the Mid- west and extended eastward into’ the Great Lakes region. Skies were clear west of the. Rockies and in areas away from| the rainy sections east of the -“Temperatures were a bitT wy * Locally heavy rains with unoffi- cial amounts ranging up to five inches fell in west central lowa Friday evening resulting in minor flooding in upper reaches of the! Nishnabotna River. The rin area was expected to extend from. the| ure te rature eather. Lowest mn Ee eee 8 8 79 73 Milwaukee 87 10 4 Minneapolis 67 59 a New York o ci 84 Phoenix 104 Hy . 87. St, Louis 89 73 2. i. Francisco 92 # 8. Ste, Marie 67 $8 Washingion 3 $9 r- Seattle 7] 58 ; % Tamps 3 78 | Aa (Ohio Valley during the day. mid-Mississippi Valley ‘into the. ¥ fine on each count. storm, Fifi,! tropical} ne» Four Plead Guilty, 13 Mute = === in Harsens Island Raid DETROIT (UPI) — Four per- en $500 bond, but Chase asked a bond on Robert Sears who was charged on two counts with sale, possession and transporta- tion of 90 ducks. Maximum penalty for violating fhe Migratory Bird Treaty Act is Six months in prison and a $500 << — ++ Guilty pleas were entered by Jasper Poole, Algonac; Russell An- drews, Harsen's Island; Charles D. Smith, Marine City; and Cas- mir Wyzykowski, Fair Haven. Those who stood mute were Howard and Paul Sears, Har- sen’s Island; Gordon and Joseph Sears, Pearl Beach; Robert Sears; Bernard Miller, Algonac; John Lega, Pearl Beach; Ernest. Johnson, Algonac; Douglas La Parl, Algonac; Robert A, Kazor, Fair Haven; Fred Odzark, Fair Haven; William W. Sodders, Algonac; and Wilfred Minnich, Harsen’s Island. Chase said Leonard Wiggins, Ronald Challenger, William Frantz Mrs. Mary Minnich and Gene John- Say Reds Mass in Force He said nent China has the “‘right to liberate” Taiwan and the Pescadoes Islands, and assert- ed that this “liberation” would have taken place long ago if the United States. had not interfered. Chou reiterated that the prob- lem of “‘liberating’’ Formosa was strictly an internal matter of the Grendiba Moses 98 Years Old Tomorrow ~ EAGLE BRIDGE, N.Y. (AP) — Grandma Moses, one of America’s foremost primitive painters, will be 98 tomorrow and she is feeling it. She still paints, though. * * * Her physician, Dr. Clayton Shaw, has recommended that there be no birthday party be- eause of her frail condition. Only members of the immediate family will drop in at her home in Washington County near the | Vermont state line. Grandma Moses, whose full name is Anna Mary Robert- son Moses, now rests much of the day. She paints for short periods, She has been afflict- ed with arthritis for some. time. Shaw, one of her oldest friends, called her condition ‘‘re- markable for’ a 98-year-old.” But she begins to feel her years a bit, he added. ... * * * She lives with her daughter, Mrs. Winnong Fisher. Her sons, many grandchildren. and great- grandchildren live nearby. lke Leaves Vacation for Far East Talks (Continued From Page One) ference topic as put by Presidential Press Secretary James C, Hag- erty: “The various pending matters before the courts on the subject of (school) —_— * Hagerty ccttea to provide any detail, But the Eisenhower-Rogers talks almost certainly will deal in -|part with the impact of the im- pending U.S. Supreme Court de- ainda Claim. _ cision—probabl: : by midmonth — Chou said the Formosa area can-|on whether integration should be not be as an area resumed or delayed at Central tected by the United States. At the same time, it was re- ported that the United States is ee to ship Nike Ajax — antiaircraft weapons carrying non-atomic warheads— te Formosa, A U, 8. spokesman would say only that he had “no information” on this report. Although no explanation of a sud- den lull in the red attack could be obtained, Liu said he doubts that it means that the communists are giving up. “Tt is too early to tell what the reds are up to,’’ he said. * * * Some sources here believed the reds may be waiting for the last vestiges of this week's typhoon weather to clear away, while others linked the lull with a strat- egy meeting reported under way in red-held Fukien province, opposite Férmosa. Reactions to the latest com- munist maneuvers in the. Far East crisis poured in today from various Asiatic capitals, ~ Lt. Gen. Yu Jae-hung, chair- man of the South Korean joint chiefs of staff, said in Seoul that the situation is ‘‘very dangerous,” presenting a ‘‘great possibility’ of exploding into a major war. In Tokyo, the newspaper Asahi reported that the Japanese govern- iment has refused®o give National- list China any clear guarnatee of jsupport against possible commu- nist attack, son. will -be-arraigned—at -a later, Rams Into. Parked Car, - date. * * * F Undercover agents bought 1,341 ducks from many of the suspects over a period of 18 months, Chase said. He said the ducks are being kept in a deep freze at East Peoria, Ill., for evidence. Chase said the birds were taken jegally. He said some were taken in baited traps, some killed with oversize shotguns and some were Two Persons Hurt Here Two persons were injured slight- ly last night when their car ran into a parked car on Pinegrove, east of Oakland Avenue. Charles E, Baker Jr., 30, of 5110 Cecilia Ann St., Clarkston, and Susan R, Baker, 33, of 295 W. Kennett Rd., were treated at Pon- tiae General Hospital, Baker was then arrested for al- netted with “gunny sacks, legedly being drunk and disorderly. High School ‘in Little Rock, Ark. Another likely aspect of the talks was how the federal govern- ment will deal with any defiance this year of court-ordered inte- gration, During his brief Washington stay the President also plans to act on 18 bills, last-of more than 300 that Congress sent to him shortly. before it adjourned two weeks ago. 270 Ancient Cars to Chug Into Greenfield Village DEARBORN (@— A record entry of 270 ancient cars will chug into Greenfield Village Sunday for the eighth annual old car festival. The program includes a parade from downtown Detroit to Dear- born and a pageant depicting auto- motive history. Separate contests and races will be held for cars in the 1899-1916 class and those from 1917-1925. Sheppard Case fo High Courts The Day. in Birmingham Ohio Supreme Bench| ’ Rejects ‘Mistrial’ Bid in Murder COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) — The nationally-famous Sheppard mur- der case apparently was headed back to the federal courts today because of the Ohio Supreme Court’s rejection of a bid for a writ of habeas, corpus, Defense Attys. William J, Corri- gan and Fred W, Garmone submit-] ted the application for the writ to Sheppard was convicted in 1954 for the second degree murder of his wife, Marilyn, in their. subur- ban Cleveland, Ohio home on July 4. He has maintained his innocence throughout the long legal proceed-| ings. : . * & * The two attorneys asked for the writ on the ground that. there were alleged trial irregularities., that authorities “concealed or sup- pressed’’ evidence that might have led to Sheppard's ‘‘acquittal,”’ and a motion for a change of venue for the trial. Hammarskjold Leaves for Jerusalem ered aI Dag eau Sch Jermain Ue nas days of talks with President Nas- ser and other United Arab Re- public officials. A spokesman for Hammar- skjold told newsmen in Cairo no concrete agreement had been reached, but he emphasized that the talks were exploratory and “not intended to result in any- thing definitive, Youths Plead Guilty to Possession of Beer Bid youths charged with being in possession of beer maria’ guilty this morning before Pontiac Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan, Preston W. Smith, 19, of 6601 Castle St., Birmingham, and Blair L. Moore, 19, of 1039 Iroquois St., Royal Oak, were fined $15 or_two} days in jail. They were arrested last night at left | Menibers of the board of direc- BIRMINGHAM—One man comes out of retirement for the fourth time to deceit local pastorate and a second becomes an ordained minister churches, «* : The Rev. Alfred D. Grey of Stratford, Ont., begins as interim pastor at the. ional ‘Church of ‘Bemtinghan® tomorrow} “morning. At 7 p.m., James L, Pratt, son of Mr, and Mrs. Homer Pratt, of 16162 Wetherby Dr.,. wil] be or- dained at the First Baptist Church, Mr, Pratt received his bachelor of arts degree, cum laude, from Harvard University and then went on for a year of post graduate etal ot See Laene of the Let versity of Edinburgh. His bachelor at Bunker © Hill tional " Guieh in Awa Conn. ke he Among the officiating pastors will be the Rev. Robert S. Shahbaz of Owosso’s First Baptist Church who will preach the ordination ser- mon and Dr. Emil Kontz of the host church who will offer the prayer, of ordination. At the Congregational Church, the Rev. Grey succeeds the Rev. Church in Garden City, N.Y. and the Rev. Carl Baird, who has entered the businegs field, E. W. Kurth was honored at the three-day Michigan Rea] Estate Assn. convention held this week in Detroit. Kurth received a certifi- cate for his “long and commend- able unblemished record for 25 years as a licensed real estate broker.” tors and Community House ‘staff will hold their annual dinner meet- ing in the house at 7 p.m. Monday. Suing Mystic Society — MOBILE, Ala. suing the Krewe of Columbus, a mystic society, for $25,000 for in- juries she said she suffered while watching a Mardi Gras parade Feb, 14, She said a_half-pound from a float by a masker hit her in the _— causing facial in- juries, Trucker Dies in Crash MANISTEE «®—Gerald Mussel- man, 22, of Birch Run, was killed Friday when the truck he—- driving sideswiped ‘another truck and overturned on a county road Square Lake and Dover roads with beer in their car. F in Stronach Township, Manistee tomorrow in loca}) package of bubble gum tossed], To Ordain New Minister; Retired Pastor Returning Reports and the election of offi- cers will highlight the evening. Lt. a head of the Birmingham Police areas Division, has completed the traffic safety course at the Michigan State University. safety meth- and, stressed the value of driver education for The Bloomfield Art Assn, will open a Variety show and water color exhibition at their, North Woodward Avenue studio at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow, Among the features of the show will be the display of silk screen print by. Ruth Adler Schnee.” Mrs, Schnee has been designing contemporary fabrics with special emphasis on the needs of architects and interior decorators for the past /12. years. ==(State Labor Law on GOP Platform LANSING (UPI)—All Repub- lican candidates for state office have agreed to make labor vio- lence a key campaign issue, the party’s candidate for governor, Paul D. Bagwell, said today. “We will advocate a strong state labor law which will re- turn control of the unions to the union members,” Bagwell said in reporting on a two-day confer- ence he held with other mem- bers of the state ticket, “We shall enforce the laws to protect Michigan citizens against the terror and violence and the corruption which have been brought to public light.” © Pays $65 for Recount, Fails to Win Election JACKSON (-- A recount of the Democratic sheriff's vote in the August primary cost losing candi- date Ben Cote two votes and $65 today. Cote, a retired Jackson police- man, trailed Robert McManus of Horton by eight votes in the orig- inal count. The recount ran McManus’ mar- gin to 10. Cote had to pay $5 fee for each of the 13 precincts which he requested to be recounted. — $1,500,000 Construction Starts at Alma College ALMA (®— Construction has started on Alma College’s new $1,500,000 science classroom build- ing, financed by a grant from the Dow Foundation. '— It is to-be-completed late next year. The building will have re- search laboratories, a 100-seat am- phitheater and a 300-seat auditor- ium. Disputd Waters Lie Off China, Iceland LONDON (AP)—The claims of Red China and Iceland to waters within 12 nautical miles of their shores have provoked disputes with two. of the world’s greatest sea powers, the United States and Britain. The one clear fact to ‘emerge from the tangled complications of those claims is that they cannot be settled in any court of law because there is no uniform inter- national law on sea limits, _ Disputes over those limits seem capable of settlement, therefore, only by force or by political ne- gotiation. * * * In the Icelandic dispute, the British have been urging the courtesy of a sheared fire hyd wrecker hoist a car in, Spokane, Wash. . ' THAR SHE BLOWS — Hydraulic -pressure, |Guard gunboats were doing all hardy Icelanders to sit down and negotiate, meanwhile defying the new limit with their trawlers and gunboats. But with confidence in their case, the Icelanders feel they need only: harry the trawlers long enough to emerge the win- ners, 4 In Reykjavik, Iceland minister of fisheries for the nation says the British trawlers defying the new 12-mile limit around this North Atlantic isliand are not do- ing any real fishing. “They're just -wasting their time,"’ Ludvik Josepsson said last night after touring three areas where British gunboats are watch- ing over the trawlers. * * * The coast guard said it had in- tercepted” messages between cating the fishermen were fed up concentrations of Icelandic Coast they could to encourage such a decision by conducting a war of nerves against the trawlers. which the United States rejects, there are many more complexities and wider issues, In a sense, it seems to be only a byproduct of the deeper power struggle. * * * Iceland extended her sea limit last Monday to protect her fishing areas, Peiping announced her ex- trawlers and the gunboats indi-| with poor catches and might leave! soon for better waters: Increased | On the Red Chinese claim, | tension Thursday to buttress her claim to the offshore islands held by her Nationalist enemies on Formosa, There is no generally accepted international agreement on the breadth of territorial waters be- cause the powers are hopelessly divided on a uniform law of the sea, Most countries observe a three- mile sea limit. The limit goes back to the 17th century when a nation’s shore batteries could reach no more than about three miles. More than 30 of the 81 United 12-Mile Limit Irking U.S., Britain Nations countries apply wider limits, Chile, Ecuador and Peru, for instance, claimed a 200-mile belt in 1953, Primarily to protect fishing. Russia has long claimed a 12-mile limit. So have many non-Communist nations. There have been several vain attempts to straighten out this tangle, the latest this year. AU. N. conference in Geneva failed hopelessly to agree on a T-article law of the sea drafted over eight years by an interna- tional law commission whose members included the big four powers, Henry’s Mir Miracle Mile Shopping Center ~ $. Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Monday, September 8th Due to the Death of Mr. Charles Henry acle Lounge Closed rant, helped a The car just wet. * was irvolved in an accident with another car and hit. the hydrant. AP Wirephote Neither driver was hurt, @ aa BOATS FIBERGLASSED - Automobile Customizing All Types Fiberglas Work | . Estimates 7 P. M. to 9'P. M., , a FIBERGLAS SPECIALTIES INES 975 S. Lapeer Rd. (M-24 Cor. Clarkston Rd.) LAKE ORION MY 3-1448—MY 3-9940 est ue oo ee --€rane- Booters to Play te tT Winning Tally ‘by Chicago in Final Minutes as Windy City Pros Win 4th "exhibition DALLAS (®# — The Chicago Bears, led by Harlon Hill’s great pass catching, scored in the final four, minutes of play on a 62-yard pass play and defeated the Detroit Lions 24-17 in an exhibition game in the Cotton Bowl last night. Hill took. a pass from Zeke Bratowski on the Chicago 49-yard line and raced to the Detroit five where he lateraled to John Da- more, who ran to the Lions’ two. Powerful Rick Casares went across for his second touchdown of the night in two plunges and gave the Lions their second pre-season game loss in four starts. A crowd of 40,000 sat through intermittent rain to waich Hill and company lead the Lions until the third period when Detroit scored on a 62-yard pass play. from Bobby Layne to Jim Doran for a 17-17 tie. They saw Hill dominate the game with his pass snagging—he took in seven for 129 yards. ® o&: *& Jim Martin put Detroit in front with a 52-yard field goal in the first period. Tbe Liohs scored their first touchdown in the second period on a one-foot plunge by Tobin Rote but trailed the Bears|~ - at halftime after Chicago picked up two second-period touchdowns by Casares-and Leroy Barnes. ~ _ Casares scored on a plunge. Barnes intercepted a pass and _ Yan through the Lions for a 34- yard touchdown sprint. . Layne converted after both Lion touchdowns. George Blanda booted a 17-yard field goal in the third period. Blanda also made good on three point-after-touchdown attempts. . * * * Last night’s game was the first time the Lions played a Western division rival in pre-season compe- tition. Counting regular season play, Chicago now holds a 31-16 edge in competition with Detroit. The teams have tied’ twice. The é ; * THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 6, 1058 8d ai a x & * Bears Tumble Lions, 24-1 7k) &: By The Associated Press The Milwaukee Braves may have run away with the National League pennant, but they’re get- ting no where fast. against rookie right-hander George Witt of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The champs have had two run- ins wjth the kid from Laguna Beach, Calif., and haven't scored a run off. him yet. Witt, 24, became the first to hang two shutouts on the Braves this season by beating Milwaukee 1-0 last night with a five-hitter and Bill Virdon’s leadoff home run in the 10th inning. Witt’s- only other work agaist the Braves was a_two-hit, 10-0 shutout August 12--giving him a of 19 scoreless innings against the champs. in which he %. *& Pirate. Hurler Blanks Chains for 2nd Time Witt Stifles Braves Again has struck out nine and walked but eight. The big power men in the Braves’ batting order—Hank Aaron, Ed Mathews, Joe Adcock and Wes Covington—have had just two hits among them in 20 at bats against him, : x & & By out-scrapping Carl Willey, who had blanked the Bucs on four hits last Sunday, Witt hoisted the x * * Bues back into a second-place tie with San Francisco, 84 games be- hind the Braves, The Giants were idled by rain at Chicago. Cincinnati rapped Philadelphia 8-4, and Los Angeles, held to three hits, defeated St. Louis 2-1 in the other NL’ games. This was the third shutout for Witt (8-2), who also has figured in another and has the Cardinals blanked 2-0 over five innings in a suspended game that is still hang- ing. . * * * Pitching for the first time in ine days because of an inflamed elbow, Witt. had only one tight squeeze while dropping his earned run average to a neat 1.65 for 93 Bears’ fullback, dives high over BULLDOZER — Big Rick Casares, Chicago men to score agianst the Detroit Lions in their game last night in Dallas. Casares scored twice a mass of line- AP Wirepheto with the winning TD coming in the last few minutes as the Bears won the game, 24-17. Roger Zatkoff (57) is the Lion stretched across innings, That was in the seventh inning, when with two out Del _ |Crandall walked and stole second. Billy Burton got an intentional pass and Witt then struck out Wil- ley’ * * * -Witt walked four and struck out three, fanning Willey for all of them, Willey (9-5), who gave sev- en hits and walked four but left nine on base, struck out five, whiffing Witt four times. The Dodgers got all their hits in the second inning off loser Wilmer .‘‘Vinegar Bend” Mizell. Steve Bilko singled, Don Zimmer got a pop fly double and Charlie) Neal then singled them across. Fred Kipp (6-4) won it with relief help, giving up the run in the sec- _lond on three of the Cards’ seven hits and an infield out. * * * Jerry Lych and-Gus-Bell each drove in three runs for the Reds, with Bell’s two-on triple capping a five-run sixth. Don Newcombe (6-11) won his fourth in a row, giving up nine of the Phils’ dozen hits and beating Robin Roberts (14-13) for the secod time in five days with Brooks Lawrence’s re- lief help, Harry Anderson hit his 20th home run, with a man on, for the Phils. Speedy Pick Winner WILMINGTON, Del. (AP)—The Blue Hen Stables’ Speedy Pick nosed out Widower Creed and won the $25,000 Delaware Invitational for trotters at Brandywine Race- the white jerseys. way last night. Bears are unbeaten in pre play with a 40 record. Detroit o—11 1—24 | fares cepiesscanies &6 2 ae te (1 foot, pl $8 — Layne). PG. Martin ne es, 2 (1, plunge e), <). Barnes ‘34, “taterse epted pass) landa (17), PAT (Blan ie AMERICAN LEAGUE i} |\Championship at San Francisco's Five Michigan golfers, four of them from Oakland County, are among 200 talented shotmakers who will open fire Monday in the 58th United States Amateur Golf Olympi¢ Country Club. Veterans Chuck Kocsis of Royal Oak and Tom Draper of Birm- ingham and a pair of Birming- ham youngsters. Richard Wey- hopefuls from this area. The 5th state player is Tony Lopucki of Romulus.” Dr. Wendall R. Aldrick, the golf- ing dentist from Angola, Ind., who captured medal honors on Aug. 26 in 36-hole qualifying rounds at Pine Lake CC, completes the six-man sectional delegation to the west coast. * * * Defending champion Hillman and and Ray Lovell, are the four Indianwood Tourney in 2nd Round Won Lost Pct. Behind New York ..... 83 52 615 — Chicago .......... 71 63 4.530 11% Boston . 69 64 519 13 Detroit = ..wsenee 66067 4% 6 Baltimore _...... 65 68 489 «(17 Cleveland = 64 «71 474 «19 Kansas City , 61 3 455 21% Washington 56 421 26 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS ae 6, Mew. York 3, night Chicago 4, Clevetand 3, night Boston 10, Baltimore 2, = ht Detroit 4, Kansas City 1 TODAY’S GAMES —, at New York, 1 p.mi.—Pascual 10) vs. Ditmar (9-6), Chicago at Cleveland. 7 p.m.—Pierce c (15-9) vs. Bell (10-10). 7:05 p.m.—Bowsfield (3-0) vs. O'Dell" Asior. Ranses City at ater = p.m.—Grim 46) vs. onnnus Bc ay Ow’'s SCHEDULE % Chic: _ at Baltimore, 1:05 N No games scheduled. NATIONAL ‘AL LEAGUE Won Lost os Behind tiwaukee res bs ttsburgh 330 “8M an Francisco .71 63 5300 8% incinnati- 2267 89 ~ 493 Be Louis eee 65 69 485 «14% Los angeles oe 70 478 144% hic “am bd ermine 74 452 19 fladelphia 58 74- 439 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS ————S 1, Milwaukee 0,° 10 innings, n cinnati 8, ——— 4, night s Angeles 2, St. Louis 1, night San Francisco at Pimwee o¢ IE oon cape rain TODA (Eastern Standard Time) Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 12:30 p.m.—Buh] (5-2) vs. Frien 19-13). Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 12:30 p. Pu immons (7-13) m. Los Angeles at St. Louis, 8 p.m.—Dry! (11-11) vs. Ma i, (2-8) or x Mabe (14 3). TOMORRO Ao Mitwaukee at Pit —— nos San Francisco at Ch 12. Cincinnati at martes | : Pe p.m. Los Angeles at St. hoes «Nos MONDAY'S UL Cincinnati at Puiabureh np is pm. Only game FRIDAY'S FIGHTS | in Basilio, 155%, ked Art Los Leng out Art Ara- By BILL CORNWELL “We ran into a buzz-saw.” That was the only comment by Leo Daigle after he and partner Andy Purdo tangled with Sam Koc- sis and Fred Wilt yesterday in the opening match play round of the Indianwood Invitational Best-Ball golf tournament. a Leo never made a truer state- ment in his life. Daigle and Purdo, both Indian- wood members; birdied two-of the first four-holes, yet found them- selves 2 down. This discouraging turn of events, coupled with the scorching play of Kocsis and Wilt, put fhem on the sidelines in a hurry. Koesis personally birdied the first four holes and he and Wilt never lost a hole as they crushed | the Daigle-Purdo team, 17-6. They birdied-the 7th, 8th and 9th holes to go 6 up at the turn, then) closed out the match with a birdie four on the 12th green. Kocsis and * |Wilt took just 28 strokes.on the front nine, seven under par, and ended_the. matche with a total of, . eight birdies, Dick Robertson and Dick De- Witt, both* from Pontiac, moved | into ‘today’s 2nd round with a 3-2 LOS: ANGELES — Joe Becerra; 120, eek * ome stopped Little r, i. a, 4. Exhibition Sunday Cranbrook’s soccer team under] coach Julius Corrubia will play an exhibition, match ‘Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock against an alumni team which will be made tp of a squad of current and former col- lege stars. The Cranes have captain Pete King of Dayton, Ohio, and Larry DeWitt of Bloomfield Hills’ re- turning to the squad, day's Kocsis-Wilt Golf Duo. Hot victory over Bill Pettibone of Red Run and Rochester’s Pete Schu- beck, : The DeWitt-Robertson tandem was 3 up at the turn, They bowed to a birdie deuce on the 13th, the lone hole they .lost, but DeWitt birdied No, 15 and they halved the 16th to end the match, They were three below par at-the finish. Detroit District champion Bud Stevens and Don Mead, Thurs- qualifying medalists, elim- inated Perry Byard and Ron Stel- ter in a nip-and-tuck duel, 2-1. Even after 14 holes, Stevens took charge with birdies on Nos, 15 and 16, then they halved the 17th and it was all over. Owen Davis and Chet Bower pulled the biggest surprise yester- day by upsetting Ralph Ellstrom and Lou Wendrow, 1 up. Davis and ‘Bower won the 10th and ith to go 2 up, lost the 12th, then halved ithe remaining holes to preserve their load. , Four quarter-finalt-matches are scheduled today over the par |35-37—-72 Indianwood course, fol- Howed -by: the: semisand-finals--on Sunday. All matches are set for \18 holes, : Friday's First Round Results Bud Stevens, Western, and Don Mead, Plum Hollow, def. Perry Byard, Red Run, and Ron Stel ter, Gaginaw, 2-1. Don Patrick, Red Run, and Bob Erde- lon, Indianwood,: def. Jim Schmalzriedt Jr., Indianwood, and Carl Ruebelmen dr., Indianwood, 4-3. Sam Kocsis, tadienwood, and Fred Wilt, Gowanie, def. Leo Daigle, Indian- good, and Andy Purdo, Indianwood, 7-6. Robbins of Memphis and San Fran- cisco’s, Harvie Ward, who won the crown in 1955 and 1956, head the ‘star-studded field in the match play tournament over Olympic’s beautiful and treacherous Lake course. That’s the layout where vir- tually unknown Jack Fleck, now head pro at Rochester CC, pulled of one of golf's biggest upsets by defeating the great Ben Hogan in an 18-hole playoff to win the 1955 National Open title. For this edition of the U.S. ama- ture, the Olympic course plays a par of 35-45—70 over 6,680 yards. Rolling hills lined by cypress and other* trees invite trouble ‘to the errant tee shot. It opens with a 530-yard par five and ends with a dramatic 18th hole on which the golfer drives blind to the bottom of a hill and then pitches to the green. The distance is only 337 yards but the green is well trapped atop a plateau. Par shooters will be the excep- tion in this tourney., In the 1955 Open, when the links measured 7,000 yards, Hogan and Fleck tied with 287 for 72 holes, seven strokes over par. Leading these who had to qualify was Jerry Pittman, a Southern =U.S. Amateur Starts Monday Methodist graduate and former Na- tional Caddie champ from Tulsa. * * * Pittman, who plans to enter the Army after this tournament, shot a seven-under-par 135 at Tulsa's Southern Hills Country Club, scene of this year’s Open. In Phoenix, 14-year-old George Boutell made the grade with 144. Twenty-four amateurs, includ- ing members of the U.S Cana- dian and Mexican America’s Cup teams, where exempt from the qualifiers that had 1,477 entries. Along with Ward, the best bets to dethrone Robbins are ex-ama- teur champ Charles Coe, Billy Joe ‘Patton; Dr: Edgar Updegraff- and NCAA Phil Rodgers. * * * Kocsis, who went to the 1956 finals before bowing to Ward, jpasséd qualifying trials for the 13th time. It was the 15th success for Draper, the 5th for Aldrich, the 2nd for Lovell and the Ist for both Weyand and Lopucki. Scheduling calls for single 18- hole matches on Monday and Tues- day, two 18-hole matches on Wed- nesday and Thursday, semifinals at 36 holes on Friday and the cham- pionship final at 36 holes on Sat- urday. 9-Year-Old Boy True Sportsman Prior to Shot ROSWELL, N. M.. (AP)—Nine- year-old Jimmy Fay was the proud possessor of a trophy Fri- day even though he didn’t play in the New Mexico State “Amateur Golf Tournament. The youngster, son of Mr. and M R..L, -Fay. of. Roswell,.. re- ceived the award from the state golf association. for outstanding sportsmanship, When runner-up Chris Blocker was 0 ng of the galleryites. He felt the 17th hole of the final, Jimmy was one of the gallerites. He felt a wasp crawl down. the back of his shirt. It stung him three times. Cranes as Shaw Emmons of Deni- son, Leo. Butzel. of .Cornell, Al Butzel, John Himmelhoch and Sig Snyder of Harvard, Bruce McCall Phil Angel of Colby, Fred Wood- of Williams, js A week from Sunday a team made up of 16 foreign exchange fot Yale, Bob Isbell of Princeton, |*! worth of Amherst and Jim Maas 1 ang Vweorge Wilson, Red Run, ‘def. “Gib ) Mason, Indian- _— hen George Lakiiosh, Meagdow- brook, 1 w Pick ie Rotverteos, Pontiac, and Dick De- Witt, Pontiac, def. Bill Pettibone, Red Run, and Pete Schubeck, Rochester, A Jack a oe and Paul Ander- k Pinkham, In- dishwood, and ee - a jurt, Washtenaw, Owen Davis, peter ees, and Chet Bower, Indianwood, def. Ralph trom, arborn, and Lou Wendrow, Lansing, i Waite, Indianwood, and Bob ben Ww Su Today's Se Mead and Stevens vs. and Erdelon; Kocsis and Wilt vs. Henkel and Wilson; or eeargg | and DeWitt vs. Zinn students will meet the Cranes in "The alumni will have such ex- an exhibition game, and. Andetson; paves and Bower vs, “wer and Reynold: crying but did not move a muscle until Blocker had made his shot Blocker’s shot was good for a 3-2. =— three, New Queens of Softball STRATFORD, Conn. (AP) = Stratford defeated defending champion Fresno,, Calif.,. 1-0 Fri- jday night for the Women’s World ‘Softball Tournament title as two Stratford pitchers combined for a no-hitter. * Jimmy_—bit-hislip-to-keep from opposition -in-his-bid-to-make it” in Title Event for Barnum’s Crown, More Than 60 to Aim: Wants Shot at Sugar’s Title before Tiger Frank Bolling started the double TOO LATE, ROGER — Kansas City center- fielder Roger Maris tries to get into second. base second base for the force out. The Tigers won, . 4-1, AP Wirephote play but he was too peng Bolling stepped on By The Associated Press Tom Brewer, one of the pitchers Boston hoped would: provide a chance at the American League pennant; finally has come around to perk up the Red Sox’ closing shot for second place. * * * The lean right - hander, just turned 27, didn't get started until after the All-Star Game, when the Red Sox were already a dozen games behind first - place New York, After winning 35 games in 1956,57, Brewer had won only three of 10 decisions for the first three months of the season. Now, with the Sox running only a game and a half behind second- place Chicago, Brewer has won six straight and seven of his last eight decisions, Only teammate Ike Delock who won 10 in a row, and Yankees Bob Turley and Whitey Ford, each of whom .won iseven straight, have had longer success strings this year in the = #--f Brewer padded his record to 11- 10 last night, setting down Balti- more on four singles as Boston belted the Birds 10-2, 40 Car Field at State Fair Detroit's 1950 auto racing season will reach its climax Sunday when the green flag for a 250-mile battle which will feature the final day’s program at the Michigan State Fair, Qualifying trials at the Fair Grounds will start at 12:30 for the 60 entries, and the 40. cars posting the fastest marks will face the starter at 2:30 to vie for the $7,500 at stake in the “950,"" Over a span of the last nine years, this annual State Fair rac- ing attraction has drawn an aver- age attendance of 15,700 and the list of winners includes ‘such na- tionally famous “name” chauf- feurs as Tony Bettenhausen, Paul Russo, Henry Banks, Troy Rutt- man and Johnny Parsons, Parsons, who copped top money in the comparable event a year ago, is expected to return Sunday and must be classed as one of the favorites for the winner’s purse of $2,000. Drive for And Place a field of 40 new stock cars gets| All American of National Championship — Washingtort ‘. a 30 ced, ‘but beat the Yankees 6-3, the White Sox got past Cleveland 43 and Detroit rapped Kansas City 4-1 in the other AL games, Bob Nieman and Bob Boyd split Baltimore’s hits off Brewer, who had a two-hit shutout for seven innings; The Red Sox socked 14 hits while beating Jack Harshman (11-12), with Bill Renna, a .167 runs, Pete Runnels, who regained the: AL batting lead at .324, drove in three runs with a double and a single, Dick Gernert had three singles and a double. * * * The Senators made it when Yan- kee relief acr Ryne Duren, now 6-4, walked in three runs with two out in the ninth, Roy Sievers’ 35th home run and Ablie Pearson’s game-winner Bob Turley. Russ Kemmerer, who had a no- hitter for five innings, was chased in the eighth, when the Yanks scored two for a tie. Dick Hyde (10-3) was the relief winner. x &.*® A pinch, two - run double by Sherm Lollar and a winning rw gle by Jim~ Landis brought the White Sox from behind in the seventh inning liever Herb Score wen he Wynn (13-13) was the winner for a 40 record against his old mates. Larry Doby drove in all three Tribe runs with his 12th home run and a single, Al Smith hit his 10th home run for an early White Sox lead, hitter, doubling twice for four)! third, a two-run shot, gave the/|l Nats their early lead. "against 20-|has Fred DeLano, former general manager of the Detroit Pistons, and ex-publicist at the University of Michigan, Detroit Lions and U. the adjacent 4th i damage has now been repaired. FOREST HILLS, ‘N. Y. (UPI) — Three Australians, led by defend- ing champion Mal Anderson, and jone strapping Swede fight it out today in the first semi-final round of the U.S. Tennis championships without an American player since the. tournament was inaugurated in 1881, The slashing, black-haired An- derson was paired against the lone Swede—big Ulf Schmidt— in one semi-final while Aus, tralia’s Wimbledon champion Ashley Cooper battles his Davis Sunday, at Midland MIDLAND — A field" of more than 60 of the state’s finest pro-| fessional golfers will tee off Sun- day in the annual Michigan PGA Championship tournament at Mid- land Country Club, Long-hitting John Barnum of the Blythfield Clab in Grand Ra- pids is the defending champion but he will have plenty of strong LOS ANGELES (AP)—‘Sure I wanna fight Sugar Ray Robinson again—but only if the money is right,” said tough little Carmen Basilio after pounding dapper Art Aragon into a bloody, reeling derelict in eight savage rounds, * * * Basilio Blasts Aragon Basilio last March against the winner of last night’s fight. x * * Aragon showed. the Wrigley Field crowd of 22,500 and a nation- al television audience he had plenty of heart but not the guns to stop the relentlessly punching ex- two in a row, Included in. the field are Wally Burkemo and Chick Harbert, the most successful of the state’s tour- ists, and Mile Dietz, Ben Dula, Tom Talkington, Eldon Briggs. and a flock of other shotmakers cap- able of taking the prize. x * * The tournament is q one-day, 36-hole event, The host pro, Cliff Good, said the Midland course is in excellent shape, *T can fight either_Robinson or Virgil Akins, but Robinson has to) fight me,” said Basilio, who knocked Aragon loose from every- thing but his celebrated sense of humor last night. “Is this guy Basilio really a welterweight?” asked the badly cut Golden Boy in mock. disbelief as he sat in his dressing room, sipping . beer, Truman Gibsori, head of the In- ternational Boxing Club, said Rob- Marine from Chittenango, The gross gate of $236,521.10 set a California record. ‘Basilio, former welterweight as well as former ~ middleweight champion,' opened with his jungle- style attack and didn’t let up until Referee Tommy Hart pulled him from the battered Aragon at 1:27 of the eighth, _ i> 8 ® Hart’ moved just as Aragon’s itaMonica,Calif._.who_is:3.0 with Althea in previous matches. The itine Tram an, 11-9, Cup teammate, Neale Fraser, in the other. Anderson and Schmidt complet- ed this disaster to America’s. al- ousting.the jast two Americans yes- terday with the loss of only one Set, x *« * Anderson applied the cincher as darkness settled by overpowering Dick Savitt of South Orange, N.J., 18-16, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, in battle of “bombers” lasting two hours and 27 minutes, Schmidt earlier bumped Herb Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., 7-5, 8-6, 8-6. Fiam had planty of agility but his shots weren’t hard enough. Savitt belabored every ball he could ‘reach with blazing power ‘ones that counted. By contrast, the women’s semi- final was All-American, though even that contained a couple of surprises, In the upper-bracket semi, de- fending champ Althea Gibson. of New York meets her old nemesis, Mrs. Beverly Baker Fleitz of San- other pairs two unseeded ers —Darlene Hard of ———e. Calif., and Jeanne Arth, eats old St, Paul school. teacher — teamed to win the U. 8. iuaan crown recently, against Britain's 17-year-old Chris- 61. Mrs. Fleitz, who hits ‘with ‘equal. power inson’ had agreed to defend the| middleweight title he lifted from ‘corner ‘threw ina towel, tradition- al symbol of ring defeat. - with either hand, knocked out Ma- _ ed irda iol Netters Od 4 but he was too slow to reach the = ready battered court. prestige by — -Miss Gibson gained: her position by erasing a Wightman Cup defeat”