■, M. The W^aM U.S. Wtalhtr BurMu Fartcisl ... Fair, Warmer PRESS . Home Bdltfoft- i Toy lot to UtgG Settled, M vr ± 3 ford Preparing N, Viet Raids? to Roll Again SAIGON, South Viet Nam (iP)—^U.S. Ambassador MaxwM D, Taylor he thatUJS. air strikes against Communist bases and supply lines in North Viet Nam and Laos could contribute to victory in l5outh Viet Nam. He also believes that the outcome of the anticommunist guerrilla war Starts Calling Back 80,000 to Make Up Lag in Production DETROIT OP) — With the last of its local strikes settled, Ford Motor Co. made in an interview with Life* plans to begin turning out magazine, set off speculation automobiles again tomor-that he might recommend an “very much in doubt.” The ambassador’s appraisal,^ escalation of the war when he meets this week With President Johnson in Washington. TayloT flies home Wednesday. .“Military action outside the country, jnst as {Hire military action inside the country, will not win in itseif,” Taylor cautioned in the interview. row. The first of 80,000 laid off or strike-idled employes returned to manufacturing plants over the weekend and passenger car assembly lines tentatively were schedule to begin rolling again tomorrow in Dallas, Louisville and Wixom. 7 Convicts Most Sufvivors Kidnap Pair of Italy Tragedy in Escape iistedasGrave WALLA walla, msh.{Jf>-k band of escaped convicts held a Walla Walla couple hostage at knifepoint for* several hours early today as they fled into Oregon in the couple’s car. . The seven prisoners, including three murderers, escaped TWA Boeing 707 Hit Grader WRile Trying to Halt Lift-Off ROME (;P) — A four-jet from the Washington State Pen- airliner carrying 7:2, per-itentiary through a 40-foot tun- sons exploded in flames nel last night. Warden Bob Rhay said Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Jeppe of Walla Walla were kidnaped by the convicts in an alley behind the Jeppe home as the couple was returning from church services. Pontiac Pross Photo “Let us say generally that the issue is very much in doubt. Three truck lines, which the strikes did not shut down, con- MAXWELL D. TAYLOR Lost Hunter Leaves Wilds Was Missing in U. P. Woods Since Friday CHINA INtf^VENTlON Some observers fear Communist China then might take a direct hand. •Taylor said (hi Communists HOUGHTON (AP) - Missing de- since Friday in frigid, snow- heavy losses, choked Upper Peninsula woods, Gen. William C. Westmore-a 33-year-old Grand Rapids deer land, commander of U.S. forces The winner will be the one that ^‘"“ed today, but Ford said has the ultimate will to win. '•hpse at Kansas City and But the military aspect is only Mahwah, N. J., may be forced one piece of it.’’ because of a lack of parts if if from tonight until Friday, The , Louisville truck line is to con- U.S. policy makers, dissatis- ti„ue through fied with the way the war has „ vuvvk been going, have been studying "h* the possiblity of extending to Ford said it may be a week the north to check support of before it gets its coast-to+coast the Viet Cong. - ■ - - -» i-.- j-.—*- SALUTE TO YOUTH — Olympic champidn Hayes Jones (left) presented his gold medal to the youth of Pontiac at the “Salute to Youth” rally'^held in Pontiac Northern High School yesterday. Jones won the first place medal in the 110-meter hurdles held at the 1964 World Olympics in Tokyo. Accepting the hard-earned award on behalf of Pontiac’s junior citizens is Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. today after colliding with a road grader and about 43 oif-^those aboard were reported kilted. The plane, a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707, was gathering speed for a takeoff at Fiumicino Airport, but suddenly wobbled, Jeppe told Rhay one of the fjjf j.Qg(j grader and exconvicts drove the Jeppe car to pioded. Of the 72 persons aboard— Gresham, Ore., where it was abandoned in a field. passengers and a double crew totaling 17—at least- 29 survived. Pontiac Pays Tribute Most suffered grave injuries The prisoners, all involved in previous jail escapes, left Gresham in a blue station wagon which they presumably had were rushed to hospitals, stolen, Rhay said. Gresham is Among the passengers were just east of Portland. reported to be 26 TWA employes WEREN’T HARMED Rhay said fcJepp., told him they were not “treated badly at have you meet the two people played in City Hall where it w. ' 900 Attend 'Salute to Youth' car production race. Ford, crippled sinde Nov. 6 because of what it called parts shortages resulting from United Auto WdHEers''trnion walkouts, had lost production ground to itS rivals. General Motors and Chrysler. In what the company called ®ri. m Viet Nam, said in the Life the cumulative effect of the “ppople are often too quick c counts show parts shortage, the last assem- to criticize youngsters Instead , - bly line had closed down Friday ofpralsingthemfortheiras- of about 13 months and an engi- killed so far this year com- night. setsartd achievements, neer, complained of frostbitten pared with 6,000 government Among the survivors was the network of 17 assemblv hlanta Pontiac’s junior citizens h a d have you meet the two people played in City Hall where it “d;”’ w. Lowell'^^Glen^^ Lir?ac?il^^SSdel their day yesterday as over 900 who gave me the courage and would be kept in trust should unharmed although they were ^°well. Glen H ^ ® • ■ proud psTehts, participants and the stren|^ to go on, my Jones ever desire to have it re- threatened with a homemade spectators filled Pontiac North- mother and my wife.” turned. knife, ern High School’s auditorium hunter found his way out-today. Robert Fisher, a bridegToi Following this brief introduc- The 205 youngsters honored The Washington State Pain the xity s first official “Sa- Jones turned to Mayor Tay- during the three-hour ceremony trol said the search now is lute to Yoh^h.” jjjj. jjoitjing the gold medal he were awarded certificates signed being concentrated in Oregon. * * * won at the Tbkyo Olympics. by officials of the «ponsoring officers said It is presumed “Salute to our youth,” said “Mr. Taylor,” he said. “I am committee, Pontiac Citizens’ the convicts still were travel-Mayor William H. Taylor Jr , honored to be able to give Ihw Committee on Youth, and lapel .ing together. “is POTtJac’s number one ppj- medal to you for the youth of pins- „ ' Pontiac.” omhiom nf was me secpna The flight, TWA 800, originated in Kansas City, Mo., and stopped in Chicago, New York, Paris and Milan before reaching Rome. It was headed from Rome to Athens and Cairo. Accounts of mechanics and other workers at the scene said The strike at a key parts plant _ . r _ r. - . ♦lon’o \mnnrv nAnnIo wa urnnf feet, but otherwise seemed in casualties. a, a good spirits, said Deputy Sheriff * * * in Sterling Township, Mich-, Jerry Buschell, who talked by He said actual Communist was disposed of yesteruay. ®parents a pat on losses probably totaled 18,000. strikers at the 6,500-man plant “It is absolutely inconceivable ratified an agreement reached coo™8emcnt and direction that to me that the Viet/Cong could earlier, ever militarily defeat the armed telephone with Fisher. Fisher walked out of, the woods at Messner’s Mill in the community of Toivola, about five miles north of the village of Donken, outside of which he disappeai*ed. Buschell ordered Fisher brought immediately to a hospital in nearby Hancock for examination. T A- m , A * pin bore the^blem of .^j^. four years''from a'm^ crash occurred this way; J". ite winning category. There were J„m security cell Eln^toi ThOlane was speeding down that the medal would be dis- 14 categories In all. ^ing runway when flames erupted * * * from one of the wheel assem- In 1960, five inmates of that wing fashioned a ladder of the ^ * frames of their bunks, over- plane started to wobble powered some guards and tried captain applied the . hfolrAcr D.f ____ acts to the children’s good” LAST SETTLEMENT Dedicating the program to the forces of South Viet Nam,” Westmoreland said. Settlements also were an- memory of“ John F. Kennedy, nounced at the two Wayne, Taylor pointed out, “Our late Mich,, assembly plants • - - ............. ■ Thousands Around Globe: Pay Tribute to Kennedy Saigon was hit yesterday by its most serious antigovern- go over the wall. ‘i”*® ih® Pi®"® ii’® ALL LAUGHT way and crossed on into a cross- Two of the convicts were runway under repair, shot and wounded in the at- OUTSIDE MOTOR , tempt. The others, were re- The plane’s richt outside mn-NEW YORK IJP)—A cluster of white rosebuds and captured outside the prison by tor knocked over a parked road last President, idolized by youngsters jasmine lay among hundreds of other floral offerings noon the following day. Harold Schoesler, Van Huong took power two and a half weeks ago. * * Huong ordered police and par- h isher found his way out as atroopers to use tear gas to dLs-authorities expressed “fear of g^. j, ^g^ch of 1,000 Budd-the worst” in his disappearance j^jgjg government palace, in an area 20 miles southwest ★ ★ ★ of Houghton. Searchers had earlier Buddhist demon-sti-ation In which a score of per- ment riot since Premier Tran ®''erywhere, recognized that des- on g grave in Arlington National Cemetery, me.. H,«e Premier Tr.. ^ E 8 ^ called to ratification meetings young,' today. All nine local plant strikes had hpen over local agreements to supplement the national Ford-UAW agreement of Sept. 18. STANDING OVATION »“ended a special As the spotlight focused on a RidROnal service in Aus- majped in seclusion with her former Pontiac youth and pres- tin, Tex. two children, Caroline and John ent Olympic gold medal winner, Air Force planes flew over Jr., at their weekend Long Is-Hayes Jones, the applaUse rang Cape Cod in the missing buddy land residence. correctional officer at the prison, said the men had dug through a cement floor in the cell block and tunneled about 40 feet to a point outside, “right (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Over the weekend the compa- • I.A 1 ailiUlUII ill .WIIIVaII a OI-UIC Vt |/C*- WIV vvsaspu feot of snow. Overnight temper- injured and 40 arrest- ny sent recall-to-job telegrams ovation. out and the entire assemblage formation — one position va-rose to its feet in a standing atores had ranged down to 20 touched off the palace to thousands of workers over march. the country. there. ONE FIRE Fisher said he got a fire started Friday night, but was urtoble to get one started either Saturday or .Sunday night, his matches having become damp. thank you, nil,” said Jones. “And I would like to In Bill Collector 'Big' Success t and many other thoughtful' nation paused yesterday to remember, and pay tribute, on the first anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. The mother of the 3Sth president, Rose Kennedy, attended two Roman Catholic Masses at Hyannis Port, Mass., where the Kennedy family has its summer home. Quints Born to Paris Pair grader. As the plane skidded, to a halt, doors opened and passengers began jumping out. There was an exlposion, the plane burst into flames. Then other explosions smattered the wreckage. Brought to hospitals were a Martin Chappler, Ernest Havell Jones, an American serviceman from Louisiana; and two Ethiopian citizens, Didane Kenu, 23, and TeSpayo Tetle, 24. They were only .slightly injured. Sen.-elect Robert F. Kennedy and his sister, Mrs. Sargent Witnesses said fuel poured OiiintUDleffi - „ Ti„ ..ll aftc It hit the grader. Shrlver, knelt by ,the Arlington three boys and two girls - were . i„ 1^.. _______ u horn IoHav fo Mr« MnniniiA ^ ,, . Advertisers and subscribers to He said he stayed alive by university’s student covering himself with boughs of t^elr bills pine and cedar trees. In Today's Press Oen^ocrats Caution urged in use of House [Kiwer- PAGE (;-9. Britain Hank of England inter esl rates hiked by Labor-lies PAGE A-3. Life Span Not imadi Increase since 1900 for those over 40— PAGE A 9. Area News .......... A-4 Astrology .......... D-t Bridge ............. D-2 Comics ............. D-t SBtorlals ........... A4 arkets 1)4 Ohitunries --------- B-8 Nporta .........C*B~43-8 liieators ...... .. D*W TV-Kadfo Programs D-U Wilson, pAnrl D-11 Pages with unusual regularity, since Cliff Edwards of 1081 Voorheis, became the paper’s new business manager. Isdwards stands 6 feet 6 inches tall in his slocking feel and weighs 240 p o u n d s, reasons enougli to be leery of personal encounters. A Junior majoring In busi-ncHK administration, Edwards is on leave of absence from n plant security Job at General Motors Fisher Body Division. Edwards’ success is partly duo to ills experience. At 34, he has had more experience chasing down delinquent debtors than his predecessors. He is completing a college education Interrupted Id iWi by a prolonged Illness. The Illness had made hlitj ineligible for an ROTC scholarship he had been receiving. ., News Flash The tragedy that had reached grave to lay roses' on It, and to born today to Mrs. Monique ,f.K,lTFn around the world was relived pray. Candor, 27. at a clinic n subur- f URL IGNITED ben Asnlcres, attendants roport- around the world In solemn ceremonies, as ^undredJ of thou- in Boston about 3,000 persons, ueauu" .sands pul aside part of their day including Patricia Lawford, the xhe babies weighed The fuel ignited, they said, and All were reported in good the plane exploded 200 yards further along. for their own private ways of late president's sister, and state remembering. Mrs. John F. Kennedy sent a small spray of wlldflowers to the grove. They were delivered by her mother, Mrs. Hugh Au-chincloss. The president’s widow re- age of just over 2.5 pounds caCb. dignitaries, attended a memo- j^e rial Mass celebraterl by Richard chlldren-4 and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 6 years of age. It was the second major air disaster in Italy this year. Forty-five persons were killed (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Winter Is Planning to Remain With Us UALLAfl (UPl) - A tcdernl Judge today ordered bankrupt farm tycoon Billie Sol Bstos to tortcit« hall bond uimI u uinr-•li«l>took him into custody, sriler s (Ijkirlier page B4. I.) OU STAFFER DiMirways at Baklaiid University's student newspaper offices have to be (aU to accommodate Cliff Edwards of Pontiac- Edwards, the paper's new business manager, dwarfs diminutive Sheri Jadison q|f Union Lake, rhanaging ediior. Edwards stretches to 6 foot 6, vrihia Miss Jacksonibarsly nukMlfaetll. ' . il. After waiting months for autumn to cool things Off, winter appears to have become Impatient and stepped In early to bring temperOtiires down In a hurry. * For the next five days, temperatures will average about five degrees below the normal high of 41 and low of 30. It will turn colder Tuesday and Wednesday and remain cold through Saturday. I’reclpltatlon will total two- to fmir-tenths of an inch in snow flurries Wednesday and Friday, Temiieratures today rose more than 20 degrees from a low of 20 before 0 this morning to 42 digrees at 2 p.m. PUNE CRASHES - Rescue workers approach tha atlll-buroing wreckage of a TWA Jipeing 707 JelUner t$ Rome's FIDimldi^q.^lr- pori after the Cairo-bound pltnu crAshad on takeoff, Approximatoly 80 ot.lHu 79 aboanl w^e repprled k||Ied. ■A' I-.U. THE PQNTIAC l*RESS^ MQXDAY. NOVEMBER 23, 1964 New Rating Method Is Asked by 'Blues' LANSING (AP) - Michigan Blue Crhss;’. Blue Shield tpday asdced the State Insurance Department for pem^on diange their methods of rating subs^bers. ■Hic plan would replace the community , rating system witii a group experience factor — meaning that subscrfi>i groups wbifld piQ^ according actual usage know then the car was very slow and there weren’t very many people around. “You know, there is always noise in a motorcade and there are always motorcycles beside us, a lot of them backfiring. So I was looking to the left. I guess there was a noise, but it didn’t seem like any different noise really because there is so much noise, motorcycles and things. But then suddenly Gov. Connolly was yelling, ‘Oh, no, no, no!’ Rankin; “Did he turn toward you?” Mrs. Kennedy; “No; I was looking this way, to the left, and I heard these terrible noises, you know. And my husband never made any sound. SO I turned to the right and all 1 remember is seeing my husband, he had this sort of quizzical look on his face, and his hand was up, it must have been his left hand. And just as I turned and looked at him, I could see a piece of his skull and I rCmember, it was flesh colored. I rememiMr thinking he just looked as If he had a slight headache, and I just remember seeing that.' No blood or anything: FELL IN LAP “And^hen he sort of did this (Indicating), put hi# hand to his forehead and fell In my lap. “And then I just remember falling on him and saying, ‘Oh, no, no, no!’ 1 mean, ‘Oh my God, they have shot my husband.’ And ‘I love you, Jack,’ I remember I was shouting And just being down in the car with his head In my lap. And it just seemed an eternity. “You know, there were pictures later on of me climbing out the back. But I don’t remember that at all.” Rankin; “Do you remember Mr. Hill (Secret Service agent Clinton J. Hill) coming to try to help you on the car?” Mrs. Kennedy; DON’T REMEMBER “I don’t remember anything. I was just down like that. "And finally I remember tT voice behind me, or something, and then I remfimber the people In the front seat, or somebody, finally knew Something was wrong, and a voice yelling, which must have been Mr. Hill, "Got to (he hospital!” or maybe It was Mr. Kellorman (Roy II. Kcllerman, Secret Service agent who wu riding next to the driver), In the front seat. But aome< Ctng. 1 was Just down and him.” « , The Warsaw popular daily Zycie Warszawy published tribute to Kenney. MAN OF PEACE In Moscow, the Soviet Communist party paper Pravda praised the late president as man of peace, and urged President Johnson “to develop the realistic tendencies which were planned in the Kennedy years. in State Is 27 Seven Days Are Left in Michigan Season By The Associated Press Michigan’s deer hunting Mson pushed into its final seven days today wth a total of 27 hunters dead. ' Eight victims, Includmg^ father shot and killed accidentally by his son, a hunting companion, lost their lives from gunfire. Bil'mlng ha m Area News Traffic Survey Shows NgjToofbridge Needed BIRMINGHAM V- The Bald-win-MapIe interswtion is not a particularly hgwdous one, is used by few chilmen and probably could not be improved by the installation of more traffic The others died of heart attacks. The weekend’s snow storm, a prewinter' fall that for its extent and depth was earlier than usual, favored hunters with help in tracking deer. HUNTERS HOME On the other hand, the accompanying sudden cold blast also was reported responsible for keeping many would - be^ hunters out of the woods. The severe conditions moderated on Sunday with temperatures rising. In Washington, more than 30,000 Americans, their lines black against the Virginia hills, climbed the tong slopes to the eternal flame that burns above Kennedy’s grave. There were young adults and old, babies in carriages and aged in wheelchairs. President Johnson’s daughters, Lynda Bird and Luci Baines, each brought a stemmed yellow rose to place beside the wiidflowers which the widow had sent. There was a wreath from the President. LIGHT TORCH In Los Angeles, a torch was lit at the Memorial Coliseum to bum from the time on Me clock when he was shot until sunset. A 74-year-old veteran of two world wars stood in front of his home there at 6 a.m., and raised a flag slowly, with arMrltlc hands. “He did more Man any other president has done for democracy,” said Me flag-raiser, Enrique Moreno, “This lives on today.” In San Francisco, hundreds were turned away from an overflow crowd at St. Edward’s Ro. man Catholic Church, where Mayor John F. Shelley and oth-top city officials attended a memorial service. Ex-Official for County Is Dead at 72 A retired, real estate Salesman and former county official, Lewis C. Jarrendt,' died Saturday following brief illnOM. Service' for Jarrendt, 72, of 3.328 Indiandale, Orchard Lake, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparka-Qrlffin Chapel. Graveaida nllltaiT rites will be conducted at White Chapel (!emetoryt A former manager of Pontiac City Linos, I**-. Jarrendt aervod Oakland County Drain Com-islonar in 198344 after 10 years as deputy, Ho sarvid in World 'War 1 ^d WW II. ratlitng with Ma rank of major, and wag i former couti^ CtvU Dafenaa dirao< PASTCCMMANbfiR ' A past' nbminandar <1 Cook-Nelaon AmeMcgn Laglon Post, he was aotive In Mm affairs of the Pontiac AVea Chamber of Commerce, Lions Club and Grace Lutheran Church. He Is Burvlvod by a son. Lowis W., of Otciiatti Lake and sister. Two hunters, Jacob Folkers-ma, 49, of Rudyard and Foster Smith,,20, of Jackson, were shot and killed by accidental gunfire on the weekmd. RUNNING DEER The Chippewa County sheriff’s office said Folkersma was shot by his son, Arnold, 17, as the two were firing at a deer that ran between Mem while they .hunted north of Rudyard. The father and son were about 125 yards apart, sheriff’s men said. A snow squall was in progress at the time. Smith was shot by another hunter in Maple Ridge Township of Alpena County. The other hunter was being held for investigation. The Alpena County sheriff’s office skid, a manslaughter warrant may be safety devices; ’These are Me findihgs resulting from a study Me City Commission authorized iti June to determine wheMer a pedestrian bridge should be built under that carrying traffic across the River Rouge. Recommendations will be presented to Me commission tonight. The footbridge had been suggested as a means of protecting children on Meir way to and from Holy Name School. Results of a police department traffic survey Nov. 9 were surprising, according to City Manager L. R. Gare. ‘SURPRISED US’ “The pedestrian crossing count also surprised us,” he noted. “We found that no school-children crossed Maple until after 3 p. m. on Nov. 9.” - ThrnexLdar policeieamed pedestrian traffic after 3 p. m. consisted of five high school students and two from Holy Name. Gare has joined traffic engineer J. J. Dobelek of Detroit in recommending that Me footbridge not be constructed but that some trees and shrubs be removed from Me norM side of Maple east of Baldwin to improve visibility. Harold Gerlach, 42, of Stanton died of a heart attack while hunting three miles northwest of StantqOr Alohzo Gelling, 46, of Wyoming, was found dead Saturday, apparently of a heart attack, in woods of Midland County’s Jerome Township. A native of Sanford, Gelling had returned to hunt in that area. 43 Said Dead in Plane Blast (Continued From Page One) March 28, Easter Eve, when an Alitalia Viscount crashed into Mt. Vesuvius trying to land in Naples in fog and rain. The worst air disaster in Italy occurred June 26, 1959, when a TWA Super Constellation crashed in a storm near Milan. Sixty-eight were killed. There were conflicting reports on Me time Me explosion occurred. While some persons said the blast occurred just as Me plane lifted off the ground, others said It exploded while on an approach strip just before reaching the runway to begin its takeoff. An air[K)rt employe said he noticed a flame from an engine, saw the jet roll another few meters and stop. DOORS OPENEp He said Me doors opened and passengers be^an jumping out. At Mat moment, he said, an explosion ripped It to pieces. According to one vsnhm by wliJiesses, Me plana ictnally lifted a few feet oft Me run- Me pilot tried desperately to brake it to a stop. One wing of Me plane wui reported to have struck a heavy roller at the edge of the strip, damaging the virlng and ceusing fuel to pour out. According to Mis version Me fuel ignited and Me plane exploded 300 yards farther along. An airport employe said: ”1 beard Me blAit, tMmed« •lid sew people blown inte Me ilr. Then Me flames broke out First of the Identified Injured was BltxaboM Loretta Cortley, 39, of Santa Monica, Calif, Sho was taken M Rome's San On-millo llospital suffering from various fractures. Motorised Home polloe and ambulances from Rome end nearby Ostia rushed io Me V Noting that pedestrian use of the intersection does not warrant increased traffic controls, Gare also said that the footbridge would be unusable one month a year becmise of high water. ATTRACTIVE PLACE “It would be an attractive place for the children to play and the possibility of fallbg'or being pushed into the water would be present,” he said. “It should also be remembered Mat sex deviates occasionally create problems when they find an isolated area (uch as this,” he added. weather. Me Birmingham Recreation Department has moved up to Wednesday Me openiiig date for the municipal ice rink af Eton Park. The department originally had^ scheduled the opting for Thanksgiving. However, if Me weather holds the hours for open skating Wednesday will be 44 p. m. and 7-9 p. m. Nab Suspects in Theft Try in Birmingham Birmingham police are holding three suspects, and. seeking two more in an attempted larceny from Roberts Furs yesterday afternoon. Three men, wh6 refused to give police their names, were caught yesterday at a roadblock manned by Southfield police in Beverly Hills. Still at large are two men last seen in a .black iIm Ford bearing Michigan license plate YR8456. Police said five men were caught in Me act of stealing fur coats from the establishment at 550 N. Woodward shortly before 5 p.m. yesterday. They were seen and chased on foot by Me ownff of Me adjacent building, Gerald’s Beauty Shop. The would-be Miefs, police said, had pryed’j>pen the beauty shop door and*smashed a hole in the wall separating .the two businesses. CHASED MEN The owner of Me shop chased the men until Mey got into a car with an Illinois license plate. He then notified police. The three men taken Ihto custody were caught on Kennoway Court, after they had jumped out of a stolen car at Pheasant and NorMlawn. Four shots fired by police hit Me vehicle, police said. With the onset of colder 2 Kidnaped by 7 Convicts Fleeing Jail (Continued From Page One) as close to the wall as Mey could get.” “They’d probably been at it for six months,” Schoesler said. He said he did not know how Mey got through the cement. Warden Bob Rhay said homemade shovels were found In the tunnel. “The men were not armed \Vhen they left, unless .possibly they had homemade knives,” Schoesler said. “They would have no flrearms at-any rate. Apparently they left on foot.” DANGEROUS MEN State patrol dispatcher Willy Johnson described all seven men as dangerdu.s. The tunnel was discovered between 9:30 and 10 p.m. The men had last been seen at dinner about • p.m. Rhay said the tunnel wns just big enmigh tor the men to squeeze through. The men were identified as Vortls James Barrett, 38, Arthur St. Peter, 39, Neil C. Wallen, 28, John L. Mullentx, .33. Harold Thomas. 38, Donald Maseros, 23, and lllehnrd Eugene Loux, 26. IN FOB MURDER Masqros was serving a life term for rirat-degrOe murder In Me slaying of a service station attendant during « Imidup in Seattle In I96I, lliomns wm serving life for seeond4egr«e murder In a jealousy shouting at Auburn, Wash., In 1903. Wallan was serving a life term for murder from Spokane, Wash. / St. Peter, Thomas and l^x pnrtiel|Hit«d in a daring break from Me King Ceunly Jail In Seattle In INI. They were I on • tepik made et Injuries Kill Youth in Area Was Hurt in Crash Fatal to Other Teen A second Beverly Hills youth has died from injuries sustained in a Friday night traffic accident in Bloomfield Township. Erie Hebfer, Oakland Highway Toll in ’64 152 14, of! 32805 Bcllvine died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He was Me second v ic t,l m of a crash which had killed Timothy W. Guenther, 17, of “{575 Plumwood. ' Heber was a passenger in Guenther’s car, which hit ice on West Maple and skidded into an Oakland County salt truck just west of Whysoll. A 65 - year - old Birmingham woman was killed Saturday when the car in which she wan riding skidded into oncoming traffic on the New York State Thniway. Now York State Police said Mrs. Olympia Sr.ybkc of 15.35 Penistone was dead at the scene of the accident in Pembroke' Township, about 25 miles east of Buffalo. Mrs. Szybke was riding in a ir driven by Dr. Prlmltlvo Hova, 35, of Fulrport, N.Y., who uninjured. Delroif's Papers Return Wednesday DETROIT (AP) - Detroil’a two regular daily newspapers, strike-idled for 131 days, sped efforts today to prejfere for publication Wednesday. The Detroit Ne^s, an gflcr-nuun paper, and the morning Dotnrll:' Free Press called back their entire U>tal staffs of more Man 4,000 persons. When the papers ci»m« out Wednesday, It will be MeIr first appearaiiOe on Me street! and subiorlbers* doorsteps llnoe last July 13. Powerful, quiet running dry-Mer with large hood, Posi-|tion$ for hot to cool, air; ■ Portable so your hands are gfrea to do anything while fiyour hair is drying. |#1807 Diyers, 19.88 i#1808 Dryers, 24.88 , ‘DOMINION’ i*s> I Electric Toothbrush Dental Care Center } Simms ] Price marily to strengthen the, Intw-nafional position of sterling," which has been' under severe attack in world currency markets. The announcement said Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan, will make a „ statement on the raising of the discount rate this afternoon id the not foreshadow any other measures." The rise is the highest, since July 25,1961, when Conservative Chancellor of the Exchequer Selwyn Lloyd instituted a period DO YOU TAKE VITAMINS AND STILL FEEL TIRED?* If you take vitamins and still feel tired, your trouble may be due to iron-poor blood. Vitamins alone canT build up iron-poor blood. But Geritol can! Because just I two Geritol tableU, or two tablespoons of liquid Geritol contain 7 vitamins plus twice the iron in 1-lb. of^alves’ liver. In only one day GERiroL-iron is in your bloodstream beginning to carry strength and energy to every part of your body. Check _________Dg tired because of iron- poor blood, take Geritol, liquid stronger fast in just 7 days or money back from Gerttol. *Due to iron deficiency SIMMS.E. 98 N. Saginaw — Drug Dept. Of austerity in an effort to halt' another pajments crisis. The basic' cause of the financial difficulties is that BHtain is spending more abroad than she is selling and the deficit is growing. The new Labor government instituted a 15 per cent surcharge on all' imports except food and raw materials earlier this month in an effort verse^thfrtr«id. This brought the regime into conflict with most of Britain’s suppliers, especially her partners in the seven-nation European Free Trade Association EFTA. The Bank of England discount rate is the interest rate that borrowers throughout the nation must pay on loans, mortgages and the like. The first danger sign of weakness of sterling came on Friday when the pound declined to $2.78V4,’the lowest level in eight years and the floor af which the Bank of England must step in and buy to prevent the pound going lower. MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS Take PRUVO tablets when you want temporary relief from minor aches and pains and body stiffness often associated with Arthritis, Rheumatism, Bursitis, Lumbago, Backache and Painful Muscular aches. Lose these discomforts or your money back. SfMMS BROS. Depf. Store 98 N. Saginaw — Drug Dept. ORDER NOW! I BUCK^ I or Color Prints 4 PHOTO ....GREETINS Check Simms low prices on photo greeting cards all with mailing en-I velopes. Bring in your fovorife negative ■ T1 — hurry order now. CARDS ind we'll moke photo cords from Hie pound reacted sharply to the raising of the discount rate and rose five-eighths of a cent to $2.78%: SURE SIGN Thf bank was believed to have paid- out between $30 mil; lion 1^ $60 million Friday to buy sterling.' Hie drop of the pound was a sure sign that foreigners were getting rid of pounds because they feared they would be devalued. The Labor government previously had said it wanted to avoid raising the discount rate because it would tend to stagnate the economy. Reaction to the move was not long in coming. A spokesman for the Chamber of Trade said: “It is bound to put up the cost of living, which, we regret very , much, but in, > view of our present position w realize the inevitability of it.” spent on ad- IKN T«n»e Til .1 istage stamps Honor John f. Kennedy NEW TOBK. Novk S3 (EN)—A very dnuRoal serlM lar^ lUaiaond shaped postage stamps honoring dohn F. Kennedy was issoqd recently by the Kingdom of Fenoen . . . halMhe stamp bosns a shrlUng portrait of JFK with appropriate Inscription—the top s^ion deidcts American space craft in flight . . . This very nnusual set of three stamps sold but day of issue and are now quite scarce. Because of the intense interest in JFK memorial stamps issued by foreign nations, Elmbnt has prepared a collection containi]«.rcointly issued John F. Kennedy stamps from Colombia, Argenthia, Chile, and Togo, plus the popular Yemen set mentioned above. Interested collectors ihay obtain this extraordinary collection of 9 dlKerent stampameiiiorialtzing John F. Kennedy by sending 81.00 to Elmont Stamp Co., ^eeqs Village 29, N. V. Approvals and other offers included. ‘ TUES. Hours 9 a.ni. to 6 | Again and Again ton’ll Still Save More at SIMMS No mottor how many timos you shop rt Simms, you'll bo , oblo to sovo mors on ovorything you buy. Wo ottoorHso •jOft a fow tho mony thousands of borgaii|s on oil floorg at Simms. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Alwayg fhe Perfect ChrUtmae Gift GENUINE DIAMOND RINGS Shoots 3 in Football Spat AURORA, JWo. (UPI) - Mrs. Olive Claus, 43, who doesn’t like to see footballs rolling across her yard, is in jail today. Three of her neighbors, who own a football, are in the hospital. The trouble began yesterday when Warren Ormsby, 24, and his brother, Mike, 12, were playing catch with the football in the street. The ball rolled into Mrs. Claus’ yard. Mrs. Claus had warned the two before that if that ball ever came into her yard again, they would never get it back. 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