The Weather Sunday—A little warmer Details Page 2 ENE Bi THE PONTIAC PRESS lL ER Pay 118th YEAR xkke« * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 195528 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Je Giant Freeze Grips Nation East Reds Mass Fleet of J ~ee Scene MAINE WRECK—The Maine Central passenger train “Pine Tree Limited” was washout near Augusta, Me. last night. Two milk cars in front of the train fell into the Kennebec of Maine Train wrecked by ajalthough three Derailment River (background). General Hospital early today. were listed as good. Yn Se ape ae a4 AP Wirephote | No one was serioysly injured, | passengers were still in Augusta Doctors said they 2 Train Wrecks Injure 60: Weather Cited as Cause By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At least 60 persons were injured, none seriously, in a pair of train wrecks last night. Railroad officials said| This finding is both accidents were caused by the weather. At Sauk Center, Minn., all 12 cars of the Western Star, | Seattle-Chicago passenger below-zero temperatures caused a rail to become brittle | Ba Gives Up Hope for Road Ballof program on the April 4 ballot for voter decision. Sen. Haskell L. Nichols (R-Jack- [ 7 Hitt } Fe ag rete Ey et F 3 R 2 At i ot and break. Two passenger cars and two mail cars upset, while the remaining cars jammed up in a zig-zag pattern along the tracks. The crash injured 40 of 190 passen- gers, who remained inside the cars for warmth until buses came to pick them up. Only three persons were injured seriously enough to require med- | Zor passenger train plunged off an undercut roadbed along a river near Augusta, Me. in a rainstorm last night. Four passenger coaches left the tracks, bat none overturned. A Maine Central Railroad spokes- man said a rainstorm that soaked most of New England and forced the Pine Tree Limited to run about 40 minutes late also apparently Soviet Economy Still Unchanged, U.S. Experts Say WASHINGTON ®—State Depart- ment fiscal experts reported a be- | lief today the Russians have made | virtually no changes in their econ- omy despite all their talk of a shift | back to heavy industry. based on careful | Soviet budget | for the 1955 calendar year. The | budget was presented last week | | analysis of the new train, were derailed when 14- to the same Soviet parliamentary session which saw Georgi Malen- kov succeeded by Nikolai Bulganin | as premier. | Despite the Soviet announcement | | of a new emphasis on heavy indus. | try, which is the basis for a heavy , war machine, American experts consider the Kremlin has never abandoned its goals in this field | under the five-year plan expiring next December. What has hap- pened, they say, is that during Malenkov's regime some emphasis was placed also on consumer | goods. | The Russian economists appar- | jently found the double load too | sumer goods goals were not met | ;and apparently will be lowered | this year. U. S. Takes Over Job of Viet Nam Training SAIGON, Viet Nam ® — The United States today formally took, over the reorganization and train-| | ing of the Vietnamese national Premier Ngo Dinh Diem an- nounced the program, agreed upon by Viet Nam, France and the United States, will be directed by Lt. Gen. John W. O’Daniel. | The young national army is to be slashed from strength of 217,000 to about 140,000. | During 1955 an unspecified reserve | force authoritatively reported as/ 150,000 will be established. The United States will foot the’ bill for the training and reorgan- | ization program. Rats Take Over Tachen Islands ‘as Pullout Ends 70-Boat Armada Along. q China Coast Threatens ~~ New Formosa Crisis TAIPEI, Red China massed a fleet of armed motorized junks off the Nationalist outpost island of Matsu today, the Defense Ministry said, in an ominous new threat right on the heels of Chiang Kai- shek’s peaceful evacuation of the Tachens with U.S. help. The appearance of more than 70 armed junks along the China coast near Foo- chow posed a possible new crisis in the tense Formosa strait. And on the Tachens, the rats took over today. The twin islands 200 miles north of Formosa are all theirs until the Communists come. loading appeared like a medieval area (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) MSC Marking 100th Birthday 900 Dignitaries Gather on Campus to Launch Centennial Celebration EAST LANSING (UP) — Some 900 educators, businessmen, and government officials from all parts of the world gathered here today ical attention when a Boston-Ban- | heavy to bear. At any rate, con-| for the start of a year-long cele- bration of Michigan State College’s 100th birthday. They marveled at the 570-acre campus which grew from a tiny clearing hacked out of the Michi- gan woods in 1855. Speakers praised the concept on which the forerunner of the na- tion's land - grant colleges was founded: College educations for the “common man.” The principal founders’ day speaker was Dr. James B. Co- nant, United States high com- missioner for Germany, who de- livered the convocation address at 3 p.m. Dr. John A. Hannah, president of Michigan State College, will dinner at 7 p.m. Others speakers were Gov. G. Mennen Williams; Dr. Harlan H. Hatcher, president of the Univer- + Formosa ) —| § ‘ unks Near Matsu of Rockies | | BEARDLESS ABE—A pewly-restored portrait of Abraham Lincoln, by George P. A. Healy in 1860, shows the president as clean-shaven. &. It is said to ee. - ~~ -* ¢ tf in Pontiac Today Temperature Low From Rockies to Atlantic; 25 Reported Dead ‘The eastern two thirds of the nation fell victim to an attack of numbing cold and q i ay asf ¢ AL F A E iT L i i A : i 4 L Ui [ > be dae +e Sa. * United Press Phete Henri Dorra, assistant. Washington observances of Linedin’s birthday today include the placing of a be the last one painted of Lincoln before he grew | wreath in the Lincoln Memorial by Maj. Gen. John 'a beard. Viewing the portrait, recently placed in | H. Stokes, commander of the Washington Military the Corcoran Art Gallery in Washington, are | District, and a cantata by Carl Sandburg at the Hermann W. Williams Jr., gallery director, and | memoriaj later in the day. Clinics to Be Held Sunday director, who has charge of Rabies Program in County” . Cuts Disease 75 Per Cent at Chicago Hotel Rabies—the dangerous disease of dogs—has been cut | Sift Debris of Crowded approximately 75 per cent during the past two years in the area under jurisdiction of the Oakland County health the program in most of the county outside the city of Pontiac. oN Russians Calling for World Talks Over Formosa LONDON (®—Moscow radio an- nounced today Russia had called for a conference in either Shang- hai or New Delhi on the question of Formosa. The broadcast, recorded here, | said the Russian proposal called ‘tries: China (presumably Commu- its present | speak at the Founders’ Day awards | nist China), the Soviet Union, the | nations of Southeast Asia. Britain is believed to have al- } ready rejected the idea of a For- sat States, Britain, France and a “The rabies control pro- | gram inaugurated two years |ago by the Board of Super- | ivisors has paid big divi- 'dends,” Dr. Monroe stated. | “In 1952 there were 74 positive cases of rabies re- ported in Oakland County, 'while in 1954 we had only 17. | July—over six months ago.”’ | In areas not under the control for the participation of these coun- | program — municipalities which | conduct their own dog licensing and control program — there were 31 cases of rabies last year. } | “The success of the rabies con- | trol program can be attributed | directly tg better control of “The last case was reported in | 21 Die in Blaze | Skid Row Building for | More Victims; 14 Hurt CHICAGO Ww — A raging fire | swept through a crowded Skid Row | hotel early today, killing 271 men TF +P ny ! : | ie fi i : 2 f be 3 i | ! r ; i ' it f and injuring 12 tenants and 2 fire- | | men. Hours after the extra-alarm fire | Wag extinguished, firemen _ still | searched the debris of the wrecked building for other bodies. They had | | fought the blaze in subzero weather | | for nearly foar hours. | Only six of the dead were iden- | tified immediatety, Some of the dead were victims of smoke in- | halation and exposure. Others | were burned almost beyond rec- | | ognition. More than 200 residents of the Hotel in the five-story | brick building at 644-648 West) — (See Picture on Page 2.) |Madison St., fled into sub-zero weather. } Firemen helped scores down sity of Michigan: and Dr. William | mosa conference without the par-| stray and unwanted dogs,” Dr. ladders and fire escapes from the | W. Whitehouse, president of Albion | ticipation of Generalissimo Chiang| Monroe asserteil, \Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalists. | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | College. “aleng with Joe Haas Visits Pearl Harbor . HONOLULU — A day's cruise much of it on that Sunday morn- | ing in 1941 when it was left a! through Pearl Harbor on a leis- he urely moving yacht is a positive | .. rifice. must for every American citizen | visiting here. Nothing in a per-| Simce then it has been devel- | son’s life could produce such mixed ee heen kere autins | emotions. You are both deeply sad- billions, There's nothing dened and immensely enthralled.| in world that now can match | Without dc a. | it now is Ps Nobody but American citizens) world’s top are allowed to come within hail-| and armed ing or sight seeing distance of | tion center, it, and they must individually lay harbor > their souls on the dotted line. ural are put shows that here is one None could spot where there can be no more more done leaks in our national defense. =~ % ante denn a Rts in charge that you are all, ly land that you claim to be, you then and large enough WAAS. are allowed access only ‘to ‘its to hold our entire navy. It. ae Re EPR S84. — ee al ee -- ~ a Pearl Harbor’s present rating in our armed forces is shown by the| Saddened by the memories of our (offer you that might further solace anq with winds of nearly 20 miles caer ane Tae and 3,047 of OUF | pievest headlines that today’s Hon. | losses then, we must remember morning of that sneak attack. Would Like fo Meet Kin of Boys Who Died There on His Return | contact me, I have nothing new to | you, but can perhaps explain to ' me iulu Star - Bulletin coyld get on! that it was the spur that caused | you better than in printed words nearly four hours before it was its front page: “If there's a war, us te awaken from our iethargy. | the feeling that engulfs one when it will be run from here.” In spite of all this activity, In Today's Press : Pee eee eee | It forced us to take seriously | the war that we had known was ibe averted. | Pearl Harbor now says, “It .was here that the war was won.” | standing on such hallowed ground. Especially would I like te meet upper floors, The 365-room hotel | occupied the top four floors and | jan employe said 245 rooms were | occupied. | Eight men were hospitalized | while several others were treated | for injuries in nearby mission | houses in the skid row district, | | about a mile from the Loop. in temperatures of one below zero an hour. Firemen fought the blaze | brought under control. | Anthony Dykes, 45, a janitor a’ |the hotel, told police the first jalarm of the fire came from an unidehtified man on the second low were reported with 10 below in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Pflimlin Starts Cabinet Roster sembly approval Monday or Tues- day greatly enhanced by a series of backroom conferences with po- litical leaders. Pflimlin called on President 73 | j ousted Mercury Drops to Two Below al Predicted Here Total Will Surpass 800 Built in 1954 Oscar Nominees Fret at Telecast Program Tonight Eyed Warily by Stars; Most Will Show Anyway HOLLYWOOD .. — The movie colony, worried about that egg-on- the-face look, will ‘turn out re- luctantly tonight for thé first tele- cast in history of the Academy Award nominations: - : Jan Sterling ‘‘The High and The Mighty’ summed up the feelings | of all potential Oscar nominees | when she asked her dressmaker to| whip her up something that would) look flashy enough for a winner | » as ._ | chine —the The Day in Birmingham Physicist La BIRMINGHAM—‘‘Thegolden age | of peace and progress is ahead | if man can but control himself.” | With these words of Winston | Churehill a young atom physicist made his closing remarks at the final jecture in Birmingham's Town Hall series 5 The atom age was in the making far back as 1895 when a ma- with Superman-like qualities X-ray machine—was invented Dr. Ralph E. Lapp, director of and —— ie a loser. | PIERRE PFLIMLIN The telecast will begin at 9 p.m.,; A 48-year-old lawyer, Pierre | EST, and will pick up from four Pflimlin, is trying to ferm a cabi- | spots—NBC Burbank, Ciro’s, Ro- | net and end the present government manoff’s and the Cocoanut Grove. | crises in France. Pflimlin, a Cath- Potential nominees will be scat- Olic Popular Republican is the sec: | tered throughout all four spots. ond man named by President Rene Judy Garland “‘A Star Is Born’ Coty as premier - designate since | will be with emcee Jack Webb at Mendes - France jost his vote of | Burbank as will Jane Wyman| confidence. “Magnificent Obsession.’ Humphrey Bogart ‘‘The Caine Mutiny” will be at Romanoff's. He was supposed to be at the down- town Cocoanut Grove but he de- clined: | “That trip's too far to drive back \ if they don’t call your name,"’ ex- <-Wieeios | plained Bogie. “Besides I'm a dew whikeds Sick out | tockholder at Romanoff's." | - aj | Bing Crosby, a favorite for “The | | Country Girl,” |) at home. He's just a few days out a | in Baby-Beating Detroit Hospital With bodies in the debris. Mrs. Ormon R. (Myrtle) Beach, Forgery Suspect Arrested After 'Postmaster’s Tip } Because Leonard Postmaster Hi- ram Terry is a conscientious man, a suspected forger and his 15- year-old bride of 10 days are in} 7 | Fractured Skull, Ribs. of the hospital, where he had a/| | kidney stone removed. DETROIT w&—A young mother ) f | s s ~ . Katy Jurado “The Broken pr iaeler absense in a y | Lance,” a favorite among sup- by ne = to stop | porting actresses will be at from crying was held today for sac ~ | Romanoft's. investigation of felonious assault. to Political Lies Sut Seroete nary) Pots goat te Bovey an sentment ie folk the telecasting of the nominations. | Soreen, 2, of Detroit, as saying Matusow Says Senator Physicians at Providence Hospi- near much from the main event coming | Encouraged Him in 1952 up March 3. Arrest Mother; Many feel that it takes away too | %¢ beat the boy in a fit of poi same wise have gy. comparison, he stated. Lapp pecsial the United States now has an atom : if rf i if i i i pp Outlines Atom-Age Develo pments + The Rev. Robert Gibson, min- ister.to youth of the First Presby- terian Church, has returned from attending the annual mecting of the National Assn. of Directors of Christian Education in Cincinnati, — . . A casual dress dance will be sponsored by the YMCA for teen- agers from 8 p.m. to midnight tonight at the Community House, s = * Even the hot dogs will have a South American flavor at the costume party Village Players will have at 9 tonight at the play- house, Entertainment will be a series of Latin dances performed by local Arthur Murray dancers. Prizes will be awarded for the costumes, and dancing and refreshments wil! fol- low. February marks the players’ 3rd anniversary fs Ticketed by police yesterday for © not having her car under control Maple near Glenhurst. Mrs. Amos’ daughter Sally, 6, and Mrs. Lane were treated for minor injuries by their own physicians, uti Hi today on investigation of TEL Vester, Pearl, were ar- by State Police Romeo. said he ad- forging postal money or- in 15 states in past three Te Ferndale, | | and former FBI informer, says he Others figure 5:30 in the after-' noon Pacific time, is too early to go to a nightclub. One top star commented: “It's bad enough showing up! when the odds against you are only | five to one. On this one they can be 50 to one.”’ Marion Brando, ‘Of The Water front,"’ is sure to be nominated but so far hasn't indicated whether he trial motion by 12 convicted Com-| “#! show. = vate Brando, who munists, said he made “false! ~°*"* smartly tailored suits in- statements,” during the campaign stead of T-shirts, may surprise of three years ago, and added: | everybody and show up. “My manner of presen tation and! , (race Kelly “The Country Girt.” d | Audrey Hepburn ‘“Sabrina,'’ Bill my theme was encouraged by Sen. to Tell Falsehoods sow, self-described ex-Communist | Was encouraged by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) to make false statements during the 1952 politi- cal campaign. Matusow, testifying yesterday at a Federal Court hearing on a re- suffered a fractured skull and four fractured ribs. X-rays showed he | previously suffered two of the arm and a broken leg. Police said the latest attack took place Wednesday. They quoted Mrs. Anderson as saying: “He was crying. I got mad and hit his head against the arm of a chair. He wouldn't stop crying so I squeezed him. That was when the ribs were broken.” Mrs. Anderson said she took the baby to a doctor Thursday when he had a convulsion. The doctor Foes of Harlan Shun Hearings Few Willing to Testify Against U. S. Supreme - g : $ 5 | fayette St., made statements yes- terday before Lang. Marry Sturgis, 33, of 716 Fourth St., identified Anderson in a show- up early yesterday as the man whe rebbed him of $1,100 in a Seuth Saginaw street tavern. Pontiac Police arrested Ander- son in Miss Sprinsteen's hotel | room where the officers also found $973 hidden under the mattress, a fe § et li Gy called police and sent the baby to the hospital. Police also quoted Mrs. Ander- | | P According to statements, said Court Nominee | Lang, Anderson admitted strong- , , rmi Sturgis who had quit his son as saying she the WASHINGTON W@ — Senate Ju- job with the city waterworks earlier baby’s left leg when he five |diciary Committee aides said to-. | aa this week. He said he was going weeks old and broke his arm in day they have received ‘only a to bank the money which had ac- two places when he was three | trickle" of responses from persons) usted in his retiremem fund weeks old. who had asked to testify in OPPO | for the past eight years. ‘ sition to the nomination udge tear. Anderson told police Y** John Marshall Harlan to the Su-| | Sturgis said he had never seen . the two women and Anderson be- “I don't know why I did it. 1 | a a U. S. circuit | fore. The trio was identified by judge in New York, has-been in- + Witnesses in the tavern-after they | vited to sit in Feb. 23 when the left. Sturgis, was treated for se- | committee listens in secret to pro-| Vere face bruises after he regained | consciousness in the tavern's lava- | Holden “The Country Giri” and — wart rd sos oe *| Fredric March “Executive Suite" | and made during the heat of a, “Te sl! out of ; vtearay vata af wwe RADIES Program Cu sid’ "I would have no commen’ Disease 75 Per Cen McCarthy, told said: “I would have no comment (Continued From Page One) |on Matusow at all.” | vaccination of dogs prier te li- E where the entire population i using ink eradicator-to, The 12 Communists’ appeal for amount to $75 or $100. a new trial is based on an alffi- Lake Harris was being held for postal davit by Matusow that he gave died Thursday at authorities at Oaland County Jail | false evidence against them—and | : Mercy Hospital in and his wife, who police said prob-| with the knowledge of Roy M.| “Although a six - after an iliness of four days. ably will face a forgery charge Cohn, then an assistant U. S. at- has elapsed without a single case | with her husband, is at Oakland torney at their trial on conspiracy of rabies, we are strongly urging , County Jvenile Home. They were | charges. dog owners to have their pets vac- Cohn, also in Milwaukee last cinated against this disease, pre- night where he spoke before a Re-| ferably by a veterinarian of their ; publican women’s group, com- own choosing,’ Dr. Monroe said. | mented “ : such arrangements cannot “I won't dignify his pack of lies " > : I 5 5 Ft month period | I lose my temper.” - The childs father, John Sr., was arrested with his wife but was tests against his confirmation. later released | There are indications, however, |Harian may pass up this invita- Giant Freeze Grips comminee sites mis more oan Fewer Occupations = ‘be heard on the nomination, but | the | Flint, Man Being Held inHit-RunCase e 2 tense time, the East Half of Nation Now Draft-Exempt mained in the area, guarding anette gormcdaheaperry | He (Matusow) has adequately de- peace sig should take — | that = of o— had responded mg Res dh girggrr m by < 71. of 1430 | | scribed Rismpsif." set up te have their dogs im- | (Continued From Page One) | > = . CHICAGO &— A manpower of- Cohn said he thought Matusow | “mere.” he added. areas. It was near zero in parts Some committee members have | ficial says a new guide prepared for draft boards reduces the num- Virgini Tennessee. The! indicated they want to question Cordon, Gems Alabama and Haran about his position on wheth- Per of orcupations tor deferment ; Mississippi also got the coldest er a treaty can override state laws ; eam Meee ne = weather of the winter and constitutions — a question Secretary for manpower in S. ; raised in a proposed constitutional | Department of Labor, said in a Non - profit clinics where dog owners may have their pets vac- | cinated for $1.50 each will be set up Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m. at the ““wag telling the fruth'’ at the time of the Communists’ trial and that “TI still think he told the truth.” Cohn, former chief counsel of this morning. away on Yikiangshan Island and/ +... motorists, Maxine Brewer U. N. Source Says Red, | 2 : evacuation, | °%, 89 8: Washington St.. Oxiord.| Leader W t X McCarhy's Senate P t In-| following locations: It, was freezing all the way to the ight only 30 ; the tinal stage of the .| Seth: traveling north on'M-24 to. | Leader Wants to Rela ‘vestigations cubcommittes was Troy Township Fire Hall, 778) Gulf Coast. Readings were in the | @mendment revived this year by | speech last might only 00 eccunds int sas calmed and te wind | day, reported their autos had been| Tensions in For East | asked if he expected to be called | Rochester Rd. 20s in many inland areas only a Sen. dena! —_— ater was) Scriical and important activ ) bei | sideswiped by ‘a third motorist UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. w — &% & Witness in the Communists’ | Farmington Township Fire Hall, short distance from the coast. Sena “ae Davis’ car. The windup completed six days| Scott told authorities he chased of frenzied activity during which the car to the rear of a tavern 40,000 or more civilians, guer-| where the driver disappeared. Fol- rillas and Nationalist troops were | lowing the incident, police said, removed from the Tachens. the Yu Davis reported his car stolen. Shans, 35 miles northeast, and! Deputies, who said Davis had Pishan, 32 miles southwest. | bee drinking, are holding him for In Washington, the State Depart- | further questioning today. ment announced that U.S. Navy | era and Air Forces which protected Sheriff's Deputies Probe the evacuation of the Tachens . hearing, and he replied: “I certainly hope to.” + > * Formerly, Selective Service listed 62 occupations ijn which a person could obtain de- ; ‘heel Congress. ; — a At least 25 deaths were attrib’ | con Neuberger (D-Ore) told the | Lake Orion Fire Hall, 37 E. uted to the cold and snow. The | Senate yesterday he had received | Flint St. | snow storms which hit much of | 4) or Red Chinese Premier Chou En- | lai says he favors relaxation of | tension in the Formosa area—in- | dicating Peiping is keeping the | | door open for continuing efforts to solve the Far Eastern crisis—an informed U. N. source reported | last night. Chou's stand, the source said, was contained in an oral message | |to U. N. Secretary General Dag | f i i : Cohn added that Matusow’'s testi- mony at the trial of the 12 was | thoroughly corroborated by other witnesses. Matusow ‘also testified yesterday he had sent affidavits to the New York Times and to Time Maga- zine saying he had lied in accus- | the Eastern third of the nation | Oakland County Animal Shel. | yesterday. Fails measured more | ter, 1200 E. Walton Bivd. than a foot in upstate New York. White Lake Township Fire Hall, Deaths attributed to a te cent ao maticians, physicists and physi M59 at Porter road. ° while shoveling snes 0 high- Neuberger tld his cslleagues be | par with at least a master’ de Dates for additional clinics will s On icy or in Indiana; | thinks “there is an undercover ef-| gree. : , be k. ways included . “will now resume their normal Stray Bullet Report | Hammarskjold in which the Red aS Communists petese ig be remembered. Dr. five in Michigan; four in Ken-| fort underway to discredit Judge | He spoke before in mae eee rations but will be ale _| Chinese leader again rejected a : Fe : tucky: three each in New York| Harlan without any reason being, manpower lerence spon- ope Tt to any! Oakland County sheriff's detec- security Council bid to talk about; His original statements, Matu-, Monroe added, “that a bite by a given for it.” He said such tactics sored by professional groups and Chinese Communat Terres cbolous, | tives today are investigating @ re-|q possible Formosa cease-fire. |S0¥ said, were based on ‘‘conjec- | rabid dog means the person bitten ant Tnias tho in New Jersey| ‘vould influence him to support | governmental departments. re by Grandt Word of 2541 W.| The Peiping regime first an-| ture and surmise.” | man te eur Cesta. “— ‘rather than the nomina- | ly undertaking to facilitate attack | Fist kston Ra.. Orion Township who avi. 'which entails a lot of effort, ap-| The cold front, which dipped | rs oppoee, ; tipon Formosa and will be pre-|
  • it -. match the frigid temperatures Te-| parking the auto, He added that|‘e Sabbath work 1.150-580. Affect. — BO Mir ceeeee sod > w......ts| Student Jokers Offer werk ..... 4 Lol _|ported in the upper states, | the law also ¢aills for a penalty| ©? creameries ‘sid it would take We mele Landlady a Milk Bath Scheduled to appear tor the hear-| | COUrrenee Si. 5 ERUC the meveury plunged Below sere 8 | centien, about a month to draw up a new aa ing Monday, Patridge is charged @s possi- 6 1ONS many parts of the state and flirted . | delivery schedule. Mighest and Lowest This} LOUVAIN, Belgium (INS)—Mme | with the statutory rape of a 15 ble fo guess +444 — with the zero mark elsewhere. —14 in ws |R. Coster is accustomed to the year-old girl. my line, 7 ANSEK ‘Peliston reported Michigan's tow-/ NATO Office Workers Nobody's That Patient . caer __| mischievous pranks of the students | : svestosr CT TT TL est overnight reading of 9 below. | Go All-Out for Defense ( te 14, who live in her boarding house but 44 Eire: Strawberries Yesterday's It was 6 below at Saginaw, 5 be-| ~ ~ . ‘ LOS ANGELES @ — Antonlo 32-15 | che can be excused if her patience ‘ Answer: 9 1 low at Sault Ste. Marie, 4 belowat/ PARIS @—If you're going in for | Benenati and his wife, Rosina, 8 “tis a little thin, | DeTRorr (UP) — The first Aistine HUSP Sa ae Gladwin anad 3 below at Flint and defense, you might as well go all celebrated their 70th wedding anni. Ba When went to take a bath) strawberries of the year arrived Pilot 10 WOSH | Kinross, : the way. o ga Ai Ve Sate xf 3) the other day she found a cow in) at the Detroit produce 11 OwsorRc LET ia 7 and Lansing reported 2 a he ating of pee often never quarrel,” 11 | the tub—put there by the students Po gare: Aye gicteag yr © 1s an 12 WoB ctr | above morning while it workers st the Atlantic | Benenati told an Se & Se anannt: 8 eeeate Sen SS aboit 35 cents a pint, My Line, ; tees pun 2 at Grand Rani. Jacass ey oe agree Pag wg feng Lago ay, 8 \ ee age : \ \ ee nS \ \ } eA Kf EO SS 4 l- i i » Med we | 4" So Ci fe ee BS ate - Re . : : i oo J Bit q : ea. y- \ : 5 es 3 i a A ?