Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 4

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Saturday, Aaeust li City Hiring Hundreds Full Foxboro Form Saturday, Aug. 8 41st Night tlltEl i.4$T3lt ttt ISC UST3(T tn tlltEl (ItTTICI ff. mtH 3-5 1 5 Negro Youths Get N. Jobs 3-1 -l 5-1 -l S-2 S-l 1 t-1 MXTH Cmditieaa! Pare. Wile.

1 7 A. ttr 1 3 Pnc. 'i Jr. 2 1 5 iV- rul 2fSl 2 2 3 6 Kit Kr. int.

A Day i i- 4 D. Price 2 3 7 Cr-ipt Vo.o. F.ucher 3 3 8 F.r-y. G. Maroua 3 (4 ALSO ELIGIBLE: Dean Da.f R.

McXa'iy 3 3 -a 2-3-2 4-1-3 2-2-5 -3-4 4-4-3 4-7-3 rlET Ca4ltMMl rr. Mil. 3 Bo5tF dner. Ainuwr I 1 T. LandT i 1-uu VDS T.r.r Bo Bfe 5 Sr.u.th, 3 C'T IT 2 Ltcr.

I. T-yioi i.u A ty y.ZS Crr-E J40." ALSO ELIGIBLE: BlU A. Wirirr 3 12 1 SECOND Cteteias Par. Jf II. 7 BftV.

Jo Hrv 2 1 4-7 -1-8 1-4 il7 7- 7-3 3- 7 6-8 1- 2- 3 4- 1 6-3 6- 1 7- 1 8- 3 -4-dnl -l 4 Mile. I NTH Ceitwaal Pare. 3 5 Prorito 2 "3 4 2 Ejire Roo. E. B-eae 2 4 4 Sunset Uad.

Hanay Jr. 2 08 1 4- 1 e-i 8-1 1 8-1 5- 1 4-1 4 4-5 e-i-3 7-- l-- 3-3-8 -4-1 7-7-7 3-3-T -1-t Arthur Walker, of Bedford-Stuyvesant, who quit school last December, said, "I'm going to buy me some clothes, give my sister and brother some change, help my mother and take out my girl 3-3 5-4 5-4 8-5 5-3 Arthur Kennedy, 18, who 5- 3-1 8- 1 6- 1 ti 7- 1 7-1 -l S-J 3-1 7-1 lit 3-1 5- 1 7-3 4- 1 6- 1 3- 1 4- 1 7- 3 6- 1 3-1 9- 3 li 3-1 3-1 3- 1 5- 1 7- 2 ill li 4- 1 10-1 6- 1 it. 7 Poner Crue. Jor.es 2 (- 3 6 Spencer 2 0 3 1 Gerry Chf. A.

Lara ue Jr. 2 f'5 4 8 Mountain iklnnis 2 04 4 4 uht De M. Ako Jr. 2 07 3 3 Doc Brother. C.

Boyd 2 07 3 EIGHTH Cum. taTitatUaal Fare. Mil. 3 Sn di Merita. Daisev 2 ''-2 3 7 Wnisxaway Pick.

MorriU 2 02 4F 2 Irisn Port. E. 2 04 4 3 Dutch Bomber. A. Day 2 fl3 4 1 Hnege.

P. Batta 2 i3 3 4 Guy Sdmpson. C. Jones 2 04 1 6 Hjn) M. A'Koury Jr.

NINTH timm, Claimiac Pac. FUndirta, 4 Sar.dy Lee. W. Fajcher 2 04 3 1 Adios Luu. Story 2 "0 3 6 Brother.

R. Stratton 2 05 1 5 Torrid Adios, L. Copeiand 2 05 1 3 Esouir Direct. F. lnman 2 01.3 2 Dariin Wick.

Larent 2 OS 7 Ivan Chief. P. Bat; is 2.06 3 TE NTH f.MMM. Opea Pc. Mile.

3 Dr. Brooks. A. 2 03 1 7 Mr. Chiids.

G. Djiw.v 2 02 2 3 Lou Song A. Winger 2 02 3F 4 Knmht Hal. J. Larente 2 03 4F 5 Mr.

C. Song. J. Caton 2 r2 1 Minuteman. Harp 2 01 2 6 Hal McGrath.

P. Jamieson 2 03 4 8 La Paz. G. Harp Jr. 2:03.4 "lives with his parents and 5-2 3- 1 4- 1 5- 1 6- 1 8-1 8-1 8-1 6-1 1-4-3 8-1-3 5-5-7 7- 4-8 5-8-1 8- 5-8 7- 5-7 3-3-4 8- 3-1 1-4-8 1 Qt-eea Sprig Hl Kj.

T. T-ilor 2 f3 Eitm, D. Ctrpfr'er 3 oM 3 Ci-csr Crt Ace. L. E.la 3 07 3 2 Deer, Demon.

2 10 iM 5 rt Sylvia 3 OSM ALSO ELIGIBLE Precursor. R. Maker 3 03.1 THID Ciaimlac Pic 1 Dreamy R. Jr. 3 10 3 3 Trus-y Prince.

Ja Hosan 3 3 Chief Forrester. He Bntt 2 10 2 6 Oteca Cheri. A. Day MD' 7 Katie Darei. C.

Parada 2(9 1 4 Accelerator. R. 2 05 1 5 Sawmill Gloria. Kenocc 2 10 3 8 Scr.e R. McXaiiy 2.12 ALSO Fiiir.j Cour.nei.

M. Viral 2 0 Talent. W. faucher 2 14 3 FOIBTH KHW, Claimiac Fart. Mil.

1 No Doubt. A. Day 3 2F 4 Jody Direct. L. Opeland 2 3 Frere Dares.

KeiioM 2 og 8 Militown. J. Sylvia 2 09 3 5 Leonid. C. Jones 2 08 4 Knoxville.

A. Langille Jr. 2 IF 3 Red Jericho. W. Chicoyne 2 08 7 Sn dale Date, W.

Padsett 3 08.1 FIFTH MM, CBltiBl Tret. Mil. 1-3 llf 4-2 1-2 6-3 1-3 seven brothers and sisters in a (three-room apartment in Bedford-Stuyvesant, said he hoped 'to buy "a couple of shirts and 3- 1 7-2 5-1 4- 1 5- 1 -2 6- 1 7- 1 7-7-3 4- 4-5 7-7-3 3-3-8 5- 5-7 7-5-6 a pair of pants. N.Y. Negro Aids White Man in 4' 1 3 4' 7 2 6 5 Mile.

3 5 4 6- 1- 5 5- 7 6- 4 4-3 4-2 3-1 2- 3 1- 6 2- 2 7- 8 3- 6 2-3 2-7 4- 2 8- 4 Jiiifi' Irfi muni ilm lirirrii- an' in irniMp mMtm f- mi irr iaaMMa i Genius. G. Reed Ofi 1 1 Joliy Key M. Virat ELEVENTH HMiO. Cndltlonil Pac.

6 Moneyvuel Miss, L. land 2 07 2 1 Mary Sue Exp s. H. Barker 2 07 2 3 Savings Bond. W.

Hatfield 2 08 2 4 Wamesit Victory. C. Boyd 2 06 3M 2 Valmda Moraka. E. Beede 2 08 1 5 Ronnie Burr.pas.

R. Sear Jr. 2 07 3 7 Saltbox Dicam. R. Kellogg 2 10 8 Geo Sampson.

J. Clohossey 2.07.1 YORK (AP) New York city has found Summer jobs on "its own payroll for 200 teen-agers from its racially troubled Negro neighborhoods. Eight hundred more are to et jobs next week. The joal is to ret the youths off the stmts, fire them job experience and fight poverty with paychecks. Recruiting centers report that hundreds of disappointed youths have been turned aw ay daily.

The emtrgency program, financed by the city's anti-poverty fund, is geared for 1000 youths this Sunmer. The first 200 were placed yesterday and 26 of them went on the payroll 14 as weed cutters along city streets and two, both girls, as clerks. The 26 Negroes and Puerto Ricans got a pep talk from City Highways Comr. John T. Carroll, who told them: "I don't want you to think weed-picking is an unnecessary or menial job." He displayed the brilliant red and white vests the youths will wear for visibility to motorists and got a few grins when he said with an embarrassed laugh: "Cool, Mayor Robert F.

Wagner announced the program a week ago as part of his anti-poverty program to meet the needs of Negroes and Ruerto Ricans in Harlem and in the 3 Meadow Flash. A. Foster 3 07 3 Gang Attack 1-1-1 4- 2-5 1- 4-5 6-5-4 8-8-1 2- 1-2 2-4-7 5- -3 3- 1 4- 1 B-2 5- 1 4-1 6- 1 7- 1 6-1 7 6 frince Jamie. F. Spencer 2 06 3 4 Mossie Scott.

C. Boyd 2 06 1 3 Littie Victor. A Day 2 09 7 Racey Lasie. H. Harp 2 04 3 8 Hignley's Way, L.

Norton 2 06 1 8-4 6- ALAU 1.L1U1BU: Tat Em, F. Spencer 2:112 3-3-4 NEW YORK (UPI)-A "I CAN TAKE CARE OF THEM" her son, Vernon Brooks, killed his Mrs. Mary C. Brooks, 72, reads story wife and himself. The grandmother to her eight grandchildren she has has rejected a judge's offer of welfare eared for alone since last May when aid for herself and the children.

(AP) Valiant Grandma Carries On, Keeps Orphaned 8 Together Negro went to the aid of a white stranger set upon by four men early today and found himself facing the business end of a .22 Beretta. James H. Crouch, 35, was walking along Broadway when Shoulder Tap Gives Thomas Series Shot jTowser's Caps At Wonderland tjijtt nrr nTTi i a n. e-i A.vnv.H.- he saw a man running with four others in pursuit. A shot rnibnutijrnm nrj ioui inai wnai wasey aiengei instn otsr three l.l.'i "Sit down Frank I want to; told the husky outfielder-first i 7th.

norm rosin the kk was fired as the man, later "I feel like I'm about 45 identified as Juan Serrano, talk to you." baseman. '3 impacTor 7-5-6 That's how Frank Thomas! "Casey thanked me for the 5 Bluest Luck i 2-6-2 found out he had been traded job I did, and I thanked him IZFle.Sl;e.;;; from a last place club 30 games for teaching me a lot of base- rH lev Soud years old," she told Judge Owens when he expressed concern about her age. A son, Melvin Stringer, and WICHITA, Kan. (AP) Mrs. Mary C.

Brooks stares poverty in the face every day and gives no indication that it exists. At age 72, she has taken on the job of rearing eight grand 325 31 9 32 1 32.1 324 31 8 323 32 6 han 3-1 6-1 6-1 8-1 12-1 12-1 en. "1 a un 1 6 Betty Speed 4-4-6 2 Irish 8-3-3 tripped and fell to the pavement. The four men began kicking and beating Serrano. Crouch, a teletype mechanic for United Press International, on his way home, waded in IMPACTOR Should BLltST Li ill lore pace.

oui 01 nrsi piace 10 me ironi- uan. running Philadelphia Phillies! and a shot at the big World' Several hours later, Thomas Series money. was getting the glad hand The 35-year-old Tohmas was! from his new teammates. AMPLE STYLE Lowered a grade, SECOND 5-16 Mile. Grade C.

7 Hoishcy Hutch 1-6-5 ol 8 i and pulled one of the assailants PPttinU nn tho tpw Vnrlt Mpts'l Tho nnwerful ritrht.hnnrlocl Fore 3-6-a I 4 uostons Pride 2-4-1 4-1 3- 1 4- 1 4-1 6-1 8-1 323 32.1 32 4 322 32.1 32 5 32.3 io. I bus for the trip to Phila-slugger did what he was ex- jJrpdnvk Sad I'1'2 delphia and a three-game pected in his first opportunity 2 w'edei the I ser 33-7 series with the Phils when the as a FviL 10-1 15-1 Hi.RSHEV HITCH Fit mni r.rfv Agaiigt southpaw Al Jack DOU FORE Speed inside. BOSTON'S PRIDE Has the speed. son he doubled home a run in the first inning. And in the! THIRD 5-16 mile.

Grade M. traveling secretary tapped him on the shoulder and said: "Get on the No. 1 bus, Frank, Casey wants to talk to you." children. Their father, 36-year-old Vernon Brooks, shot and killed their mother and himself last May. "I kept those kids a lot of times before it happened," said Mrs.

Brooks, a widow. "As soon as it happened I told the children to go on in-the house. "They've been here ever since and I'm going to keep 'em, the good Lord willing." The youngsters are Keith, 9, Gayle 7, Sandra 6, Gary, 5. Bill, 4, Linda, 3, Ricky, 2, and Brenda, 15 months. Mrs.

Brooks quickly shook 31.7 323 32.3 32.1 third he singled in another tal-jzDnDe ly, this time off a right-hand- scythe er. Manager Gene Mauch used 2-Markurri 2-28 Thomas at first and in the i ttl than $350 per month the total of Social Security and Veterans' Administration payments, the latter from her son's military service. She also gets a small monthly rental from a house she owns. So far I've had no problems making ends meet," she told a newsman. There is plenty of food and clothing, she said, and plans are going ahead for adding two bedrooms to her four-room frame house, "People were real kind about bringing me things after the shootings," Mrs.

Brooks said. "We haven't had any medical bills and I don't expect any. Everybody is well and healthy. "The children all eat well. They eat everything I fix.

I make sure they have a balanced diet. "They've got toys galore, five tricycles, two bikes, scooters and a swing set." Mrs. Brooks, who gives the impression of having worked hard all her life, expresess confidence that she can care for the children. a-i 4-1 4-1 6-1 8-1 12-1 12-1 15-1 31 off the fallen man. One of the foursome drew a pistol and aimed it at Crouch's face.

Then, off-duty Housing Authority patrolman Vincent Calderone, 38, who had been sitting on a nearby bench, raced into the melee. He threw an arm around the gunman's neck and, placing his .38 caliber revolver against the man's head, said, "drop it or I'll blow your brains out." The man, identified as Frank Veillanueva, 32, was charged with felonious assault, violation of the state weapons law and resisting arrest. The three other assailants escaped. 32.5 32.6 33.2 Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. Both sections were torn by racial rioting and looting last month.

The youths hired by the city will get $1.50 and hour, and many said they'd spend a large part of it on clothes. Edward Hidalgo, 19, who had thought the program would give him some training, took a filing job anyway. He said he'd been loafing since he dropped out of high school two years ago. Frank McPhail, 18, also a high school dropout, said he'd use some of the money to buy clothes and some to help his parents pay bills. Thomas, a veteran of 12 seventh, he started an unusual 7 inch wme 7-6-5 a stepson, Melvin Brooks, take the children occasionally for a day.

"Gives me a chance to get the house cleaned up," said Mrs. Brooks. She said the children have missed attending the West Side Church of the Nazarene only one Sunday since they came to live with her. It was raining that day," she told Owens. "I taught the Sunday school lesson to them at home." Mrs.

Brooks said she is a firm believer in "doing what comes naturally with the children." She told of taking them to a park where some of them went swimming. "The water looked good so I took off my shoes and stockings and waded into it," she said. "Several people looked at me and shook their heads. They must have wondered about me but the water sure felt cool." DELON SDeedv outside. jut I peed.

OK V. May show aome SCYTHE Best of the rest. major league seasons and five first to short to pitcher double clubs, said the last thing he play. He helped the Phillies thought of was that he had to a 9-4 victory over his former been dealt to another team. 'teammates.

her head when Juvenile Court FOURTH Revere Course, Grade E. 1 Cannadian Star 8-2-7 41.4 2-1 4 Jean Iris 7-3-8 40.8 3-1 6 T. Nota 4-2-3 40.7 4-1 2 Coylene 7-5-3 40.4 4-1 3 Cruiseomatic 41.1 6-1 8 Saran Along 3-3-8 40 5 8-1 5 Jamie Lynn 6-7-3 40.8 12-1 7 Wit Dix 8-5-5 41 15-1 CANADIAN' STAR Trouble In last. JEAN IRIS Can mount chal-lence. T.

NOTA Speedy factor. FIFTH 5-16 Mile. Grade E. Two Olympic Berths Seen for Sprint Star 1 Plain Talker 32.3 Judge Clark V. Owens brought up the subject of welfare aid during a guardianship hearing.

"No," she said. "1 don't want it; I don't need any welfare. I can take care of thes children." Mrs. Brooks' income is less 32. 4-1 tl 4-1 a jei Lioud 3-2-7 4 Delfast 4-6-8 tver Magic 2-5-1 32.5 31.9 32 9 32.6 32 3 NEW YORK (UPI) Sprinter I pected to produce a small but-Magic win 22z5 Edith McGuire of Tennessee powerful American sauad.

StBeauKinJ 10-1 12-1 Stnto rlmiKlo enrint winner Mie. ru 8 Brave Horn 4-1-8 42 2 it winner Miss McGuire, I sprinter vwwtsi. itii.jruij.c, auilliici 1JCU PLAIN" T4IKFR rhinr. at pnre. JET (1.0 1 the one to eaten.

against Russia two weeks ago.jbie Thompson of Rights Provision Snag Aid Backers Fight Stall by Thurmond i 4 iTJ i ji was a ncavjf lavuiuc luuajr spnnier-nuiaier nosiei SIXTH -Revere Course. Grari Bonds of Riverside, and f-U, sl LL' 2d Autopsy on Slain Worker sprinter-broad jumper Willye i Trendwood White of Chicago all had tlTe ttt 381 Jf Working Fii nunc vi xiiiiagu ail lie D. 3- 1 4- 1 4-1 4-1 6-1 iU 12-1 the chance for doubles but 7 Dainty snnrk 40.7 CfllC.O flnn't i.ioor An 5 Carry Harmony 6-5-7 40 earn a shot at an Ulympic double in the 100 and 200 meters at Tokyo next October. The 20-year-old native of Atlanta was one of four girls with a chance to gain berths in two different events on the U.S. women's track and field team during final trials ex- win nave to settle ior less, ah L.L.'s UNA takes oyer in Hint Negro 'Brutalized' stretch WINTER BUG can better last.

TRENDWOOD speed on tho four made the 100 meter final and only three can go in any one event. 'SEVENTH Revere Course, Grade Baton Rouge, La. St. Helena An attornev savs a reveal ing second autopsy has been Atlantic City came among portents of a bitter clash next week over a Republican-sponsored effort to add a legislative apportionment rider to the $3,466,700,000 aid bill. Administration forces expressed confidence they had enough votes to defeat amendments offered by Sen.

Wayne Ihirty places in 10 events 2 Party zip 6-5-4 were available but fewer than IZTfd7 .2:2 20 may be filled because so gZjjony Ifci many American girls can't pass i 1 Hazlett 1-6-4 the rigid Olympic entrance 'Malf t-H 40.7 399 40.6 40.2 40.5 40.5 40.6 40.6 hear the case before the schools reopen next month. Tampa, Fla. Gov. Farris Bryant was asked yesterday to appoint a Negro to replace performed on one of three slain civil rights workers in Parish (county), which took its school desegregation problem to the Federal government, was ordered to admit Negroes tn inninr and senior hieh 3- 1 4- 1 4-1 4-1 tl 8-1 15-1 nice set Mississippi. Into rAHl 1 11" oroppea John M.

Pratt, attorney for spot. LARRY TOOGOOD will l.rtKrl (Trnoc in iha term ctsirt. standards, particularly in distance and field events. the mother of James Chaney, 22, said at Jackson, the findings of the later autopsy would Co beyond anything' pace. TIDV LOU closes fast.

EIGHTH 5-16 Mile. Grade A. 7 Norm Hosin 1-1-6 31.4 5-2 lNavasota 5-7-2 31.9 4-1 5 Sear 6-7-1 32.4 3-1 2 Pay Jack 8-1-8 32 3 6-1 4 Silky 5-5-4 32.3 8-1 3 Sky Luke 6-7-1 32.1 12-1 6 Goldy Blue Lass 1-5-6 31.7 12-1 8 Top Ace 7-2-1 31.6 15-1 NORM ROSIN trylnf for thre utraUht. NAVASOTA damerous on the rail. SEAR ell in last.

ing next Wednesday. Montgomery, Ala. A district judge approved a plan by Mason county officials to desegregate the first grade and four high school grades this Fall. IRichard D. Barker as a dele-gate to the Democratic national convention in Atlantic City later this month.

Barker, a white man, withdrew as a 'delegate yesterday and said he jwould support G.O.P. Sen. Barry Gold water in the Fall presidential race. reported thus far. WASHINGTON (AP)-The-Senate tried today to straighten out another curve in the Foreign Aid Bill's path a Southerner's effort to add a civil rights provision to it.

Sen. Strom Thurmond says aid funds should be withheld from countries that practice racial or religious discrimination. "If it untenable to subsidize discrimination in our own country, it is equally untenable for the United States to subsidize discrimination in any foreign country," said Thurmond, who strongly opposed passage of the Civil Rights Bill. Administration leaders said they would fight Thurmond's proposal, contending it might jeopardize the aid program. The Saturday session part of the drive to clear the decks before the Democratic National Convention opens Aug.

24 in The official autopsy on Michael Schwerner. 24. Bold Lad Going For 5th Win at MonmouthClose OCEANPORT, N.J. (AP) Monmouth Park winds up its 1964 meeting today with another offspring of Bold Ruler favored to win the $102,575 Sapling Stakes for 2-year-olds. Two-year-olds sired by Bold Ruler have dominated the eastern stakes this year and the six furlongs of the Sapling promises to be no Morse to cut foreign aid authorizations by more than $500 million.

But they expect a much closer decision on Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen's apportionment proposal. The amendment would delay for two or more years a court-ordered requirement that Mr. Chiids Seeks Repeat Win at Foxboro Tonite Mr. Chiids, a Brooklyn-owned pacer that whipped Lou Song and Minuteman a week NINTH Revere Course Elizabeth City, N.C.

Six Negro school children were reassigned to previously all-whitp schools bv the Elizabeth Panama City, Fla. The county school board yesterday approved the transfer of four Grade B. 40.2 4-1 402 3-1 402 4-1 40 2 6-1 40.7 8-1 40 8-1 40.5 12-1 40.5 15-1 32.1 2-1 II Dianne's Mam'y 1-3-2 16 Dark Mary 2-7-7 4 Sulphite 1-1-2 7 Ted Able 1-6-6 5 Peace Flight 8-2-2 2 Pie Mix 1-1-8 8 Baumon 5--3 3 Chie Red Hair 1-8-8 City board of education Negro students to formerly segregated schools. 3 Joan Jeris. 5-4-! DIANNE'S MAMMY Takes over both Houses of state legislatures be apportioned on a population basis.

Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Ct.) offered a compromise to limit and Andrew Goodman, 24, showed the men had been shot but not mutilated. Their bodies were found under 23 feet of dirt on a Mississippi farm Tuesday evening. Sources said the second autopsy, which Pratt said was conducted by a noted pathologist at the request of Cha-ney's mother, showed the Negro had been "much more brutalized" than had been reported.

Chanev was buried yester In stretrn. DARK MARY Runner-up in last. SULPHITE Nice win la list. ago, seeks a repeat triumph in the $5000 Western Harness Mile at Bay State Raceway tonight. TENTH Revere Course.

Grade A. 1 Rare Match 3-1-1 40.1 3-1 2-1 the stay only until the end of Mr. Chiids will have a well- the first regular session of a legislature. 4-1 6-1 8-1 8-1 12-1 15-1 Bold Lad from the Wheatley balanced field to contend with Stable of Mrs. H.

C. otner opposition will come already has two stakes to his rom rjr. Brooks, Knight Hal, 5 Orbit Inn 5-3-1 40.4 3 Interchange 3-4-1 40.4 2 Olavit l--8 40 8 Genemaury 4-0-6 40 4 7 Bustleton 3-3-2 40 5 4 Sky Nets 2-1-3 40.3 6Sand Red 4-1-6 40.4 RARE MATCH All the way. BIT INN The main dinrer, TERCHANGE Always trying. South Boston Reunion Set for Marine Park A South Boston Reunion Day will be held tomorrow at Marine Park, City Point.

The program Is being held credit in compiling a record Mr. C. Song, and Ohio Flash, others. day in a simple ceremony at Tiny Boat Found Off Cape; Hope Fades for Girl, 6 Meridian, Miss, uooaman bodv has been returned to New York and Schwerner's remains N.H. Crashes Kill Girl, 8, And 2 Men CONCORD, N.H.

New Hampshire traffic accidents claimed three more lives this week-end. One man was killed in Manchester today, an 8-year-old girl died last night in Concord and a 42-year-old man was killed in Windham, Dead are Francis Colburn, 21, of Middleton, Valery Brown of Tilton, and Charles A. Gibbons of Bedford. Colburn was killed when he fell off his motorcycle on Front Manchester. Police said he may have struck his head on a cement overpass pillar.

The Brown girl was killed to help finance the Eastern Regional Connie Mack League playoffs to be held at Boston of four wins and two seconds in six starts. He will be ridden by Braulio Baeza. Last Saturday Bold Lad reeled off six furlongs in 1:09 3-5 under 122 pounds, the same weight he is packing today. If Bold Lad is unable to come through, the winner could well turn up in a stable-mate Time Tested owned by Ogden Mills Phipps. Both are trained by W.

C. Winfrey. Victory would be worth $61,545 with nine starters. College on Aug. 15 and 16.

Highlights will include: a water skiing show; the M.D.C, BOSTON PATRIOTS A.F.L. are to be sent to New Orleans for cremation. At New Orleans yesterday, a Negro businessman, Rivers Frederick III, 24, was shot twice in the neck shortly after he ate breakfast at a previously segregated lunch counter. He was hospitalized in "good" condition. Police later arrested Fred Samuel Jackson, 49, a white ex-convict who said the Negro had tried to run him down with his car.

Elsewhere in the nation: Tallahasse, Fla. Nine white traveling zoo; a band concert; two baseball games a fashion show two basketball games and Eastern Division Champions DENNIS The weather wasn't too good, so yesterday afternoon, six-year-old Kathleen Moro just played on Horse Foot Beach. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moro of Os-sining, N.Y.

was vacationing here and one of her games was to sit on the beach in her little light plastic boat and make believe. A sudden squall caught the youngster unawares and a wave washed up on the shore and carried the girl and her boat out to sea. Five men on the beach swam desperately after the boat but it moved swiftly away from them and they could not retrieve it. Instead, they themselves, after swimming a mile, had to be picked up by a passing pleasure boat. The police and fire departments, as well as volunteers in private craft joined a search for the girl in her plastic boat.

Early this morning, the overturned boat was spotted still drifting away from shore. There was no sign of the little girl. Scarboro Entries FIRST $800, claiming, three and up. 6 furlongs. and Negro ministers who a bean supper.

The reunion will commence at 1 p.m. with the water show in Pleasure Bay featuring Bob Curley and his Water Skiing All-Stars. The baseball games, which will match Connie Mack All-Star teams, start at 2 p.m. With the exception of the concert which will be held at the park bandstand, the remainder of the program will take place in the M.D.C. skating rink.

and her parents critically injured when their car collided with another on Rte. 83 in Concord. Gibbons, a father of two, died when his small auto went served four days of a 60 day iail term for a 1961 sit-in dem Joint Rule liz'Lumvuie I Bet 112 Cauteriser 115; ThornleaJet 1 17 Dash To Win '115 Night's Foray 117 Push Me Down 117 Shin'gArm'r "112 Rodman 117 SECOND $900, claiming, three and up. 5 'j furlongs. i Hard Grandma 115 Grey Duke 120 Ind'o'nd't Miss 115 Spooky Cadet 109 Front View 117 Walk'ng Papers 115; fnl Rnv lUAussem 114 onstration returned to their out of control" and plunged homes yesterday after having their sentences commuted by a city judge.

Richmond. Va. The 13-vear-1 iStampAtor 120iMiss Elmwood 112 down an embankment on Rte. 93 at Windham. Typhoon Ida Fades; iv'xJ 1 False Start for Pair WEEI old Prince Edward County school desegregation case was sent yesterday to Federal Appeals Court chief Judge Clement F.

Haynsworth, who will decide whether a special session of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court should be convened to THIRD $800 claiming, three and up. 6 turlongs. Lucky Island 112 Miss Speedy G. 112 Spring Lamb 120 Flying Omaha 120 Carol Marz 107 Truck Rider 1151 Blue Gardenia 112 Fleet preme 110 FOURTH $900 claiming, three and up.

5 furlongs. FiftyGrand 120 Mystic Action linCamp Royal 120 Ver'th Cassis '112 Lucie C'stable 110 Wee M. 120! FIFTH $900. claiming, three and up. 6 furlongs.

Mr. Edgor M17' Jo-Black 123 CalipsoBob 122 Hellenic Kim lit Vnrm'i Kid 1 1 a fsnlri ier Creek 119 .7 FOOTBALL KM IMIt b' Met Four-Minute Miler Collars 2 Escapees Peel Express 122 Campaign Kit 117 Noble Bov 2nd 119: i SIXTH $1000. claiming, three and I up. 6 furlongs. "The N.

S. Savanah BOSTON PATRIOTS vs Secret rnal 'ill sentry box iio jjlmaleio 122'JoeCave 116; iMiljay 111 Pauliag 116 i SEVENTH $900. claiming, S-year- Toll Set at 8 Dead MANILA (UPI) Typhoon Ida headed for Tonkin Gulf and the Red-held China mainland today, losing steam as it traveled. The typhoon left 8 dead and 20 missing in the storm-battered northern Philippines, where it cut an ugly path across tobacco-rich northern Luzon Island. Two children were killed in a landslide in Baguio, a mountain resort north of Manila, the Philippine news service reported.

Earlier, six persons had been killed by electrocution, landslides or drowning. Weather forecasters located Ida 250 miles west of with peak winds of 140 miles SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) Two 14-year-olds yesterday picked the wrong time to run away from the Santa Clara County juvenile hall. It seemed the right time to olds ti up. 1 1-18 miles.

Destrer'sPr'ce 119 DvFromDailai 1191 AndyJ MM Carbreuse 119. SoYt Ladv 114 Mamaroneck 119 HOUSTON OILERS With BOB GALLAGHER FRED CUSICK SUNDAY 2:00 P.M. Speed Trap AGEN, France (UPI) Mayor Michel Bene of the nearby community of Passage Dagon recently issued a local order banning "all motor-driven devices from breaking the sound barrier over the territory of this commune." Yesterday he asked authorities to try to discover the identities of two jet pilots who did just that July 23 and Aug. 6. Mid Arc '110 EIGHTH $1200.

"The Scarborough Handicap. 3-year-olds up, 1 mile I 'and 70 yards. runner, took his counselor for about a half mile jaunt be fore he was raptured. The other boy was picked up by other pursuers. The fast moving counselor who outran the young runaways was Don Bowden, f.rst American ever to break the four-minute mile.

"I was a little out of shape," Bowden confessed, "or he wouldn't have gotten that Population Explosion? INSECT RODENT CONTROL Ham Ciiemical Co, 893-1810 Moontone 108 Hvgard 118 110 Eveiew 110 118 Maria Donng M9 Plasticine Trance'ike MarchF'rward 117 MarK-One 123 them, since they were working on an outside detail near the kitchen and got a pretty good head start. But a new group counselor took off after them, quickly passed one, and the other. That lad, a pretty good WEEI Will IrNtcut till Entire 1964 Foelball SeHitalti iMton Mtrldi mto CHH WEEQSSO CBS RADIO, BOSTON NINTH $900. claiming. 3-year-olds it up, 1 mile and 70 yards.

Tantflra 1 19 Glan Laird 119 Ex M09 Beach Beau 119 Sh'nnn'sHope 119 Flag Man M14 Purple Prince 119 Ourtwin 119 Mel's Dream lit. far." i per hour. I.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Boston Globe
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Boston Globe Archive

Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024