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Green Bay Press-Gazette from Green Bay, Wisconsin • Page 1

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Green Bay, Wisconsin
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Green Bay Press Gazette VOLUME XLIII, No. 127 46 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS GREEN BAY, MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25, 1957 GAZETTE ESTABLISHED IN FEBRUARY. 1863 FREE. PH ESS ESTABLISHED IN MAY, 1914 PRICE 7c Swedes Study Shiny Object Spiraling Towards Moon Macmillan Trying lo Calm French Gaillard, British Leader Parley on Arms for Tunisia Bodies Are MissDing From Two firaves "in Plaint ield Cem ete Digging Done 'f In Secrecy y-1 Gem Case Kortedala near Goteborg, on the Swedish west coast. "The captain reported Jye watched the object through his field glass for 20 minutes," the spokesman said.

"We are taking this report seriously since it came from a competent observer. All details are being forwarded today to the FOA (the scientific research institute of Sweden's armed forces.) "The captain described the object as a flattened sphere circling moonwards. Its sides were somewhat elongated and there was a flickering glow as from burning exhaust gases from one side." "The object was certainly outside all sputnik schedules," the spokesman added. STOCKHOLM, Sweden A report by a Swedish officer of a shining object traveling on a spiral course toward the moon was under examination at Sweden's defense headquarters today. "The best guess so far seems to be it might have something to do with Russian satellite or missile experiments," a staff spokesman said.

"We know that it was no airplane, nor any meteorological balloon," he said," and the Stockholm Observatory has told us it was no meteor." He said the observation was made Sunday by a Swedish army captain at PARIS Prime Minis ter Macmillan of Britain ar rived today to try to calm French anger over U. S. British arms shipments to Tunisia, an issue menacing NATO unity. viy i I life" v- Macmillan plunged into his task the moment he stepped off the plane from Missile Program Good, But Too Late, Belief London, declaring in a state Both Women Had Died Six Years Ago; Some Bones Found PLAINFIELD, Wis. Authorities today dug into killer Ed Gein said he robbed and found them empty.

Bones were found on top of the second casket. ment he was determined to see that France and Britain stay on friendly terms. "We are in the same boat don't let us or anyone else try to rock it," Macmillan said. Nuclear Expert Teller Says Russ Could Leave U. S.

Far Behind at Present Rate WASHINGTON i Dr. Edward Teller said today Macmillan was greeted at Orly Airport by Premier Fe lix Gaillard, who is openly that if both countries maintain their present pace of missile development "there is no doubt that Russia will leave us behind and way behind." And already, he said, he believes the Soviets have "or will have in a short time" the ability to hit major industrial centers in this country with an intercontinental ballis tic missile. Specifically, he said he believed the Russians could hit such a distant tar get as Houston, Tex. angry over what he calls a lack of Western support for France's policies in North Africa. The atmosphere was neither exceedingly warm nor cool as the two heads of government greeted each other.

The two leaders were expected to extend their talks into the night. Macmillan will return to England Tuesday. May Hamper Meet Gaillard has hinted strongly that unless some new and solid basis for understanding is found between France and her two main NATO partners, the Dec. 16 NATO summit conference will get a cold shoulder here in the host nation. Fresh yellow posters were plastered on Paris walls proclaiming "The British and Teller, an expert on nuclear Jordan Scores U.

S. Officer Demands Removal Of Leary Over Border Incident JERUSALEM A Jor Diggers found no body in the grave of Mrs. Eleanore Adams. In the second grave, that of Mrs. Mabel Ev-erson, the casket also wai empty, but there were bones on top of it.

Both women died in 1951. Husband in Group Gein, 51, who admits killing two women, said he obtained at least eight other skulls, death masks and other parts of human anatomy during moonlight raids on fresh graves. The secrecy was necessary, Kileen said, because some residents of the stunned villag didn't want the graves opened. In the cemetery with Kileen and other officials was th husband of the late Mrs. Adams.

Kileen caught newsmen off guard with the digging, which started about 10 a.m. He had said the digging wouldn't start until Tuesday. Other residents, however, have demanded the graves be opened because they doubt Gein could have raided the weapons, was the opening witness in a broad Senate inquiry into the U. S. missile program.

Among the major points of Two Drivers Die Tons of pickles and 21 tons of frozen chickens are scattered on Highway 41 south of Appleton when two semi-trucks collided early this morning. Killed were Marvin Steiner, 30, Chilton, and Cleo D. Evjem, 25, of Rochester, Minn. (AP Photofax) (Another picture on Picture Page) his testimony: 1. Russia has been able to danian demand for the re make such tremendous advances because of willingness to take risks, to gamble in untried fields where there was no certainty the money spent would bringe concrete results.

Doubted Its Value Americans have given arms to Second Man Faces Crass Murder Count Truck Drivers Killed; Deer Hunter Toll Is 77 2. In 1946 the United States could have decided to proceed moval of a U. S. officer serving as U. N.

truce observer today threatened a breakdown in the mediation of disputes along the Jordan-Israeli border. As new frontier clashes were reported, Jordan announced that it no longer would accept the truce recommendations of U.S. Marine Col. Byron Leary. the Algerian rebels, via Tunisia." Two rightist parties have called for demonstrations and police officials were on the alert, guarding against outbreaks in the Place de La Concorde, near the U.S.

embassy. cemeteries and therefore must with missile development at top speed, but at that time there was extreme doubt that an effective long range missile could be developed. be a mass murderer. STURGEON BAY (PG) Confined to Hospital It was "years later," Teller Two organizations called for Gein, meanwhile, was con Marvin Steiner, Chilton, Victim On Highway 41 Solomon P. John, 33, of Sturgeon Bay, Rt.

3, was fined to Central State Hospital Another Missing As 1957 Season Draws to Close -By the Associated Press But a U.N. spokesman saidja missile could be demonstrat-Secretary General Dag w- wuon thie for the Criminally Insane at Waupun, where he will charged with first degree murder today in the slaying of Donald E. Crass in his marskjold immediately told clear bit of -nerpv" Today's Weather Furnished by U. S. Weather Bureau Considerable cloudiness tonight and Tuesday with chance of some light snow.

Little change in temperature. Low tonight, 24; high Tuesday, 36. Light southerly winds. Relative humidity, 61 per cent. More Weather News Page 46 be tested to determine if he is V.

Amman ffrorcnmonf Ut Truck drivers from Chil- iuaiiwas put lnt0 the program ane enough tu stand trial for Leary continues to enjoy lusjSince then h-eemoney cabin almost and Rnrhpstpr Minn murder. Eleven hunters, including full personal confidence. Gein was charged with the excellently managed but it came too late." 3. He does not believe the an exchange student from a Middle East nation, were Prompted by Incident Jordan's demand for Leary's years ago. Brought before County Judge Grover M.

Stapleton at 10 a.m., John did not enter butcher slaying of Mrs. Ber-nice Worden, 58, Plainfield hardware store operator. shot to death during Wis public manifestations. One is the extreme rightist Young Nation movement which called on its followers to gather at the embassy, just off the huge square. The other is Jean-Baptiste Biaggi's new Revolutionary Patriot Party, also rightist.

Biaggi in his call said "not content to send arms to the rebels by way of (Tunisian President Habib) Bourguiba, Macmillan comes to Paris directly to dictate orders to our government." The French reaction and the NATO strains were pointed up in Sunday speeches by a removal apparently was Russians have caught up with consin nine-day deer sea prompted by the officer's the United States in nuclear mediation efforts in an Israeli weapons, but in bombers, ra- son, which ended Sunday. convoy incident last weekjdar and other developments Two other men died of were killed early today when their iieavily-laden vehicles collided on Highway 41 about four miles southwest of Appleton. The Chilton man was Marvin Steiner, 30, a driver for the Packer City Transit Co. out of Green Bay. Cleo D.

Evjem, 25, was the other victim. Their deaths and nine others which touched off a series of border clashes. a plea. The arraignment was continued to 2 p.m. Wednesday, and John was returned to the Door County jail.

The action against John will not affect the trial of Alvin J. Polcen, according to Dist. Atty. Donald E. Howe.

Polcen, 33, now in Waupun State Prison, heart attacks. Still missing is another hunter, Ray Carothers of the Russians "apparently know as much as we do." 4. In his opinion, there are "many places" where additional money could bring Jordan charged the Israelis Mohammed Of Morocco Visits Ike WASHINGTON IP Presi- violated the armistice agree Gein Mental Tests Slayer-ghoul Ed Gein is to undergo mental tests at hospital for the criminally insane at Waupun. What types of tests will he be subjected to? Who will conduct them? A story on Page 2 answers these and other questions. ment by sending a convoy with Cornell, a 69-year-old diabetic who disappeared in Sawyer highly flammable benzine to speedier results in U.S.

pro- French cabinet minister and a County woods last Monday. a hospital in the Mt. Scopusigrams. and this country should demilitarized area within thejbe more generous in defense during the weekend raised member of parliament the Wisconsin highway fatal-ident Eisenhower warmly wel- spending Defense Minister Jacques Chaban-Delmas told an audi will be brought here Dec. 2 to face a first degree murder charge in the Crass death.

Lives Near Cabin Howe stated that enough Last year four hunters were shot to death, while 11 died of heart seizures. Apparently Shot Self The body of Abdolrahman ence at Bordeaux "We won't ity toll for the year to 815, loomed King Mohammed of compared with 862 on this day; Morocco on a state visit today, last year. declaring he hopes the King's Thp iwn omi.traiW rnrk trip here would "result in Arab part of Jerusalem. Israel then asked to negotiate with Jordan, citing a section of the armistice agreement applying to the move evidence has been uncovered whose dissected body was found hanging in a woodshed at his farm "house of horrors" Nov. 16.

Gein was committed to the Should Share Secrets 5. The U.S. program for the development of missiles and other scientific needs can be accelerated by closer co-operation among the armed serv- TURN TO PAGE 2, COLUMN 8 crashed headon almost in the strengthening" relations put up with the idea there are first and second class allies in NATO, with those in second place always obliged to say I prefer the risk of fight to involve John in the murder be- Hooshiar of Shiraz, Iran, was found Sunday about five miles ment of traffic on roads in the within a haif.mii.: center oi tne nienwav ai It nn nl.nJ WiM irnnhnuiflf u-S hoc C'hnn I Sill I I II HVI III HIUHI' I I i in in. it was uciicvcu uv vvjii-' uinrnnuvvci, nu na.i i. i.

i oa of the Crass cabin County authorities uled two long talks with theiPierce County. Sheriff The district attorney .1 Wahin.ISim0nSon siri th Rivrr Faik days, after which physicians stated "eag Bethlehem-Jordan area. Leary relayed the request. Jordan rejected it. Threaten U.N.

Hearing The Arab government's re inriH nc vfh i a rictc tirill nrocon that he does not intend to use ne a uritnpcs at Pnlrpn's fallen alseep. ing to that of servitude. And in Washington, intensive talks between Secretary of State Dulles and West German Foreign Minister Hein-rich von Brentano have ended I tons National Airport to uonpge excnange in! him. Also on hand were Gen.lwas hunting alone and appar-theif opinions on the slayer i i- t- I Rnth mpn wptp i nn pH sanity to Circuit Judge Her- trial, roicen, a oiurgeon oay. hnt him.if me Lciuh ui men veiiiuies.

it man. has been at Waupun since 'bert Bunde. pudiation of Leary as a truce observer Sunday was accom- Hackbarth than an hour be- the joint cniets oi stall, an non-j Lloyd (Larry) i inco i i was more I The bachelor-farmer has rtugusi liuo iui .,,,.,) anri a arffp Hinlhmnr-19 with both men PronouncinS Ipanied by an announcement Crass a 44-year-old wJe dead on arriva, delegation. iday morning in Jackson lor rec use. and his arce i and Mrs.

Mary Hogan, a Pine that Jordan will take the convoy matter to the U.N. Securi Today's Features Editorials Page 8 Women's World Page 12 Regional News Page 17 DePereNews Page 20 Sports News Page 23 Comics Page 28 Theater-Radio-TV Page 30 Magazine Page Page 31 Foods Page 32 Financial News Page 42 Obituaries Page 43 Classified Ads Page 43 who -r i. iuiuvt' laveju vueiaiui ty Council. jeflaba, told the President he was carrying. (disappeared three years ago Foreign Minister Samir Ri- Amencan-Moroc- Ralph Fleming 58 Brod- ritnmife.

D1UU Saturday, Gein re-enacted the were killed with a shotgun. Their bodies were discovered! For Iadson inside the padlocked cabin on1 Steiner was headed for Mad-March 11, 1955. The cabin with a 25.000-pound located in a tract of scrub! cargo of Bond pickles from woodland about 4Vi miles east Oconto. Evjem had picked up 133,000 frozen chickens at Garv. was certain can relations slaying of Mrs.

Hogan for forced by the visit. fai, commenting on the dispute, said he had been "informed of openly partial recommendations and views" expressed by Leary. killed Sunday, evidently by his neighboring Portage County ine IVing COl uie lull reu uwu kuii, as ne mijjijcu aim ff l. l. TURN TO PAGE 2.

COLUMN 2 cai'Det receuilon wneil Uie mu- ieu uuwn a tieeis umm. him at 11 a.m. Sunday for Sheriff Herbert Wanserski brother, Oren, found the body themselves pleased with the results. Von Brentano flew here Saturday for two days of conferences with Dulles. The German foreign policy chief, who had interrupted a visit to Rome, headed back for- Italy Sunday.

On the way, he met briefly with French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau in New York. The purpose of Von Bren-tano's flying trip here was to discuss proposals for strengthening the North Atlantic Alliance. Von Brentano told newsmen he was "really deeply satisfied with the talks." He said there isaid he and six other men dug delivery to Green Bay and Minnesota cities. The chickens had been shipped from Portland, Maine. itary Air Transport Service Constellation once Eisenhower's Columbine pulled to a stop at Washington Airport with a gunshot wound in the neck.

Fleming had been hunting rabbits. into a giant pile of ashes where Gein said he had placed the cremated remains of Mrs. Ho-wan and found a number of American Breakfast 'Bit Too Much' For 40 Englishmen in Manchester were promptly at noon. At Superior a boy who help- Pickles and chickens strewn for hundreds of feet He had flown here directly along the highway. Traffic was from Rabat.

ed carry a wounded deer and teeth xhe remains, er from the forest Sunday Wanserski said appear rerouted while a crew used a President Eisenhower wasicritically wounded himself four ed to be from more than one front-end loader to clear theiwaiting at the plane-side, his hours later when he was shot road. hand extended, as the Arab! in a very similar accident. person, were sent to the State fT were "differences in nuances The tractor of Steiner's ruler descended from the air-truck was telescoped into theitraft. trailer and the left side of thej He said, "Welcome, your trailer was sheared off. The! majesty." tractor of the other vehicle! but that "we found that we are going the same way in all questions which really move Larry Haworth.

14. and Herbert Rasmussen, 36. both of Superior, were reported in critical condition at a local hospital. Sheriff's officers said Rasmussen was shot about noon whpn his hinthpr. Clarence.

Blast and Fire Kill Educator FAIRBANKS. Alaska UP us." was tipped on the side, and the trailer loosed from the started by an unex fired his rifle at a plained explosion late Satur Returned to Area day afternoon caused the hitch. Rites on Thursday Steiner's body was taken to the Pfeffer Funeral Home at Chilton. Rites will be held there at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, followed by services at io nJ Vnr a nrnminpnt Ilniver- l.tailj auu uiuuiti, i-n it-q months, moving to London, Cardiff, Hull, Birmingham, Sheffield, Finburgh arid Coventry.

Manchester was a huge industrial center in 1829, when Kalamazoo's first house went up. Modern Kalamazoo is shown in pictures about the lives of 15 families including an immigrant English farmer, Protestant minister, Hungarian-born welder, a secretary who lives in a trailer, and a paper-mill worker with nine heavy-eating kids. Life in America is shown in pictures, movies, charts, graphs and samples of products. The exhibits are grouped together under working conditions, education, homes, recreation and cultural activities and religion. The biggest hit of the show was a bound file of copies of the Kalamazoo Gazette.

liawortn, were nuni-sitv 0f Alaska woman bioloeist ling in the same area. They and darnage estimated at one helped uarence Kasmus.senminjon donars to a four story oops, I mean breakfast is now served." The menu of saujoje, buckwheat cakes, maple syrup, apple juice, coffee and vitamin pills was called by a Manchester alderman "delicious, but a bit much. I won't be wanting anything else to eat for some time." The lord mayor of Manchester, Leslie M. Lever, turned out in morning clothes and his chains of office. In his welcome to the visiting Americans and their exhibit, he said: "Our common English language is like a wedding ring.

Once we have it between us, it does not mean we can stop working at getting along well together." Mayor Glenn Allen of Kalamazoo, whose city was selected as most typically American from among three other finalists Topeka, Toledo, and Evanston opened the exhibition after breakfast. It was called "Kalamazoo and How It Grew." It will be on tour for the next nine MANCHESTER, England (if) Forty Englishmen sat fio-n 9 their firt aH-Amcr-ican breakfast today. They found the coffee "superb," the pork sausage, "a bit hot for the tongue," the paper plates, "flimsy," and the apple juice "smashing." The over-all verdict was that American breakfasts were just a bit too much for light-eating Englishmen. The meal, even down to the paper cups, was flown all the way from Kalamazoo to Manchester. One diner called the feat "the most amazing thing of the lot." The breakfast introduced Kalamazoo, Mich.

pronounced "mit-chi-gen" in the English midlands and marked the opening of a U.S. government exhibition showing how American small city dwellers get along. The opening went off smoothly, except when Manchester toastmaster Robert Essow ceremoniously announced: "My lords, ladies and gentlemen, luncheon fashion a stretcher from jack-ihusiness apartment building Good Reason To Think Juveniles-Involved in Plot WARWICK. R. I.

Police said today they suspect juveniles are involved in an unusual extortion attempt. A steel-tipped arrow with a crudely printed note attached was fired into the shingles of the home of the Henry M. Viau family Sunday. The note read: "Don't call the polite if you don't want to get hurt. Leave 10 dollars at your front door by 2 o'clock tomorrow morning.

"P.S. Leave the money in an anllope. No change please. We are desprate no funny tricks." Lively Reading Found Every Day In P-G Column More than 6,000 readers each month send letters to columnist Ann Landers, author of Your Problems, which appears daily in the Press-Gazette. One of the most popular features in the newspaper, according to a recent P-G poll, Your Problems draws as many letters from men as from women, "which is quite a change from a few years ago," reports Miss Landers.

The cross-section of mail received by the popular columnist makes lively reading. Your Problems is featured today on page 13. eis ana poies io carry wounded man 500 yards to The body of Dr. Druska highway. Ischaible.

about 46, was Kenneth told authorities brought down ladders by fire-that later in the afternoon he i men wearing gas masks. Mrs. and Larry returned to thejSchaible died in her third-same area to continue hunt-story apartment as smoke and ing. iflames drove her from the Kenneth, aimed with a I window. o'clock in St.

Charles Church, Charlesburg. Friends may call at the funeral home after 2 p.m. Wednesday. Born at Charlesburg May 3, 1927, Steiner was not married. He served in the Army at Fort Knox, for two years, and was discharged in 1952.

Survivors are his father, Edwin, and stepmother, Marian, of Charlesburg, and two rifle, said he fired at ai Readers of thin British- jred fox on a hill, butmissedj land hit his brother in the back.i rothers, Walter and Donald, Today's Chuckle You needn't worry about avoiding- temptation after you pass 50. That's when it starts avoiding you. 1 An ambulance crew carried ithe boy half a mile to a high-Iway before they could tians-'port him to the hospital. C4TaTtPsblTrg. His mother died in 1929.

Evjem, the other victim of TURN TO PAGE 16, COLUMN 2 lie 3 cic aiuairu ai the numberl)? pages, the size of advertisements and the profusion of foreign datelines. i.

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