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Detroit Free Press du lieu suivant : Detroit, Michigan • Page 1

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Detroit, Michigan
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MILD Partlv cloudy, cooler. Low 63-67, high 78-82. Has and Detail on Face 3. HOURLY TEMPERATURES 15. noon 81 5 m.

82 10 m. 75 l.D.m. 83 6D.m. S3 11 pro. IS 2 S3 7 m.

S-J 12 mid. 74 a m. o.m. 79 1 a.m. 71 4 p.m.

61 9 D.m. 77 2 a.m. 69 METRO FINAL A A WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1956 On Guard for 125 Years Vol. 126 Xo. 83 34 rages Seven Cents rsr MHI Mate i i 1 1 1 LJ VJ i k) LJuU LiNxLti Herter Backs Nixon, 4 Pact Details Now Beiiiii Worked Out 20 to 23 Cent Gain Seen for lt Year 7n 1 mmf 4 lVl Killing Stassen ove New York Times St ri NEW YORK Indus try and union leaders! 1 Governor To Sponsor His 'Rival' How to LIVE 365 Days a Year reached a tentative sct-f tlement Tuesday on all I major issues in the na-j tional steel strike.

Only details stood in the way! of a full accord that would nuar-f antee three years of labor pcacet. I in an industry that has been eclmin ears But Miimesotan Still Bucks V-P plagued by yearly strikes or I strike threats. Officers of the striking United 1 Steel workers of America were so confident of agreement thatl they called their 170-member Are Ones WASHINGTON ormy (UP) Harold E. Stas wage-policy committee to meet here Thursday. That committee alone has official authority to end the 24-day-old walkout of 650.000 workers.

Hundreds of Detroiters have paid $4.95 to read the best-selling book, "How to LIVE 365 Days a Year." Packed into it is a lifetime of experience gained by a wise physician, Dr. John A. Schindler. An Angry Petri Faces Mayor (Back to Camera) SOME COMPANIES made preliminary plans for a resumption of operations Friday. sen's vice presidential boom for Gov.

Christian A. Herter apparently collapsed Tuesday when it was announced the Massachusetts Governor will nominate Richard M. Nixon as President Eisenhower's running mate. But Stassen promptly fired back he' knew this was coming and it did not change his aim of substituting Herter for Nixon in the No. 2 spot on the 1956 GOP ticket.

He said Herter, who "is not a candidate" himself, "could not do anything else but accept" the offer to nominate Nixon. Voisine Smothers Ecorse Explosion With Fireworks Ready to Pop, lie Adjourns Council Session Boy Loses Eye in Fight At School June Incident Bared At Board Meeting BY DR. JOHN A. SCHINDLER Emotionally induced illness is prevalent at all ages, but it grows more and more prevalent in the declining years of life the very time an individual should be gliding into a calm, easy harbor, instead of back into the storm. This is true partly because of the conditions and situations that the aging person must try to cope with; on the other But it will take a full week to restore anything like normal production.

The sudden brightening of the strike picture came at a 2-himr meeting of negotiators at the Roosevelt Hotel. A joint declaration followed just that they were "making progress." But authoritative sources disclosed that the industry had made "substantial" changes in its pre-strike offer. That offer had included a r2-month no-strike contract, with fixed annual wage increases BY TOM CRAIG Free Press Staff Writer Mayor William Voisine abruptly adjourned the rfe T)v BY DALE NOUSE Free Prese Staff Writer A 13-year-old hoy lost THE DEVELOPMENTS came after President Eisenhower went out of his way to give Nixon an extra-warm greeting upon the President's return from Panama. night when it appeared other benefit I other benefits. City Council meeting Tuesday hand many people handle age poorly because they never handled any part of their lives well.

The inability grows larger toward the end. This increase with age In the Incidence of E. I. I. is a new development in our century.

It has come the sight of his left eye councilman was about to set off some fireworks A standing-room-only crowd of THE INDUSTRY did not make its revised package an official offer, but indicated it was ready Presidential News Secretary I ag the result of a SCUffle James C. Hagerty also renewed 1 -tr -i. ms prediction Nixon will be the at SChOOl June IS, It Was to do so when agreement wast about because aging to- GOP vice presidential candidate in November. day is attended by far about 300 booed the adjournment. The meeting lasted only 30 minutes.

The crowd had cheered moments before when Councilman Alex Petri demanded an apology from Voisine for an allegation that Petri had misused convention expense funds. Voisine ignored the demand and adjourned' the session while Councilman Albert Buday vainly waived his arms in an attempt to get the floor. Republican National Chairman Leonard W. Hall then announced that Herter will nominate Nixon at the convention in August. He said Herter telephoned him Tuesday that he would "consider it a privilege" to put the Vice President's name in nomination.

Hall added that Herter and Nixon discussed the matter and revealed Tuesday at a meeting of the Detroit Board of Education. The belated disclosure came at the close of a routine meeting of the Board. There was no explanatiton of why the matter had not been aired earlier. The victim is Ronald Chase, of 12725 E. Warren, a 7-B pupil at the Rich Open Air School, which is part of the Carstens School, 2529 Coplin.

It is attended largely by children with malnutrition, cardiac and other health conditions. ACCORDING TO information given the Board, Ronald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Chase, had been sent out of the classroom Stassen jolts GOP Page 8. Move may split Republican Party.

Page 8. reached on all points. The new plan was understood to call for a three-year pact, with annual pay rises averaging 9 to 10 rents an hour and improvements in other features of the original proposal. Differences in the computing methods of the union and the industry made it hard to esti mate the total cost of the new package. Some sources said total first-year benefits would come to 25 cents an hour.

The full three-year figure was put at 50 cent3 an hour. THESE FIGURES were believed to include increases in Social Security taxes, overtime and vacation payments and other factors the union does not recognize as valid in calculating a wage offer. With these items eliminated, the reported package increase would bo roughly 20 cents an hour for the first year and 40 cents for the three years. Pre-strike wages averaged 72.47 an hour. The first-year benefits in the IN THE CROWD was George A.

Barber, mayor of Lincoln Park. Of the sudden adjournment, he said: "How do they get away with that? I'd be crucified." Prior to Petri's demand for an apology, the Council meeting was cut and dried. Put over for later action was a demand for $16,270.36 claimed Mayor Voisine by his teacher, Alexandria Po-nika, of 12513 Wilshire, for causing a disturbance. Nixon authorized him to say he was "very pleased" at the development. The GOP chairman said Herter promised a further statement from Boston Wednesday morning.

STASSEN, who touched off a as back pay by Police Chief Al- Soon thereafter, two other pu pils, Fred Washington, 12, of jvin Royal. 2948 E. Vernor, and Fred Hoi- Royal claims the money as his sey, whose address was given as salary during the period when furor in the Republican Party by There's the matter, for instance, of changing family sentiment regarding the aged. I can remember the time when "Honor thy father and mother" was taken seriously. If it was the last thing they were ablt.

to do, children felt obliged to see that their aging parents were well cared for. Today, it is usual for children to stand by without emotion (except a sigh of relief) and see their parents placed upon Federal aid; or if the presence of their elders- becomes irksome, it's quite satisfactory to see them placed in a nursing home. This has gradually become the attitude that is acceptable to the society in which we live. It is not going to be changed for decades, if ever. BUT THE TRUTH is that it's terribly hard on the old folks.

They remember when these same children had to be fed, had to be protected, required long hours of their time and care. And the compen- sation is to be set aside as though they had never mattered. For these children they lived. What has it brought them? These children they loved. Now who returns any love? There are plenty of people who have broken hearts (that is to say, severe pituitary stress) because they have been so let down in their needy years.

Guideposts Listed For Young and Old If you are young: 1 Develop emotional stasis now. By far the greatest trouble oldsters have I should say about 75 per cent of their trouble is that in their upper years their emotional states have at last caught up with them, as emotional states always do by the time we are 65. 2 Plan future finances. Save something regularly to add to retirement income. Cut your present scale of living if you need to.

Remember what Thoreau once said, that any event that requires a new outfit is not worth the trouble. 3 Plan a place to live when you are advanced1 in years. 4 Expand your interests by developing hobbies gardening, farming, or anything you can use later when you are done in the office or the shop. Instead of retiring, start a little trade or a little business, be it ever so small. Get your mind active in new fields; to night school, take a correspondence course.

Get acquainted with books. 5 Since you are going to be old some day, start' making people see the problems of the aged as realistically as you do they are going to get there, too. IF TOD are already aged: 1 Co-operate with the inevitable and accept gracefully whatever fate may bring. 2 Whenever an old friend departs, seek a new one. 3 Try to be flexible and adaptable in your thinking; avoid prejudice; don't criticize youth for being as they are.

4 Dress neatly; sew up the holes in the old garments very carefully. Retain good, clean manners. 5 Do not dawdle; pursue interests as though you meant business. Above all, keep the disposition pleasant and cheerfuU people with a smile and a kind word. Don't gripe except when no one else can hear you, and when you can't hear yourself.

Never let yourself know how tired you are. Just sit down for a while, telling yourself that doing so was what you had in mind, anyway. 7 Don't worry about dying. Everyone who lived before you stood it. (Copyright, 1934, br Prentice-Hall, Inc.) TOMORROW: Six needs can bring unhappinesa.

2708 Ellery, were sent to bring a case of milk into tl.c classroom. The Board was told that a his move to dump Nixon" in favor of Herter, said he knew Turn to Tage 2, Column 1 he was demoted to lieutenant and an administration man, Al-vin Gillman, acted as chief. GILLMAN was demoted to in- scuffle took place and a pencil in vounsr Washins-ton's Docket specior juiy i aner me oiaie 'Clean Up Ecorse Club Asks Williams The Romanian-A merican Club of Ecorse telegraphed Gov. Williams Tuesday to request "an immediate grand jury to clean up our city." The telegram, signed by Nick Tatu, club president, and George Ivan, secretary, said: We urgently ask you to request an immediate grand jury for the City of Ecorse. Please help us to clean up our city." NEW PURGE pierced Ronald's eye.

nre-strike offer came to 17 i Ronald was sent to the principal's office. Betty Ritzenhein, Ecorse shields gamblers, policemen say. Page 3. Rippe has a hot time at noisy Taylor Township meeting. Page 3.

cents an hour, by industry'3 reckoning. The union estimated them at 14 cents an hour. THE UNANSWERED question was what happened between 4 i Turn to Fage 2, Column 4 more stress than ever LS before in history. Dr. Schindler The important change in our time has been a tremendous increase in the absolute and relative number of people over 65.

In 1900, one person in 20 was over 65. Today one in 11 is over 65, and by 1980, it will be one in seven. THE FUNCTIONAL illnesses of age may be any of those of earlier years, but they tend to assume one similar pattern because the prevalent emotional picture in old age is insecurity (of finances, oi health, of the future), apprehension, disappointment, discouragement, and so on. These emotions, you will remember, are the ones that stress the pituitary to produce the somatotrophio hormone (STH) with its attending joint, arterial, and kidney effects. In other words, STH effects are degenerative effects.

It is Important to note that the group of people over 65 is the only group whose life expectancy has not increased since 1900. At any age up to 65, you can expect to live longer than an individual of the same age in 1900. But after 65, you cannot expect to live longer than a person of the same age did a hundred years ago. This holds in spite of the fact that practically no old person today dies of pneumonia or other infection, and in spite of the fact that people even with some of the degenerative diseases, such as heart disease, can be carried on for years longer thaS might have been possible even 20 yeari ago. It can mean only that degenerative disease has been accelerated in our time, and the cause of the acceleration is an increase In emotional stress.

Getting Old Today Is Not So Easy Don't think that getting old today is the same kind of thing that getting old was 50 years ago. Times change, and so do the factors that the aging have to contend with. First is the matter of financial security. How well off are you, or how well off are yoa going to be the age of 65? With the depreciation of the dollar, which means lower annuities, with the high tax level, with the hesitancy to employ people older than 45, more people than you think are not going to be self-sufficient at the age of 65. THE LASTRESORT of the scoundrel is to suggest, "Why doesn't the old fellow get a job?" The scoundrel doesn't appreciate that in the present labor market it's getting hard for the fellow over 45 to pick up a fresh job.

Being a vigorous young nation, we worship youth and slight old age. Old age is regarded as a regrettable incident, necessary for others; an Incident which we hope not be prolonged beyond reason; an incident which will be as troubleless to the younger members of the family as possible (somehow they cannot see themselves at 65) assistant prin-c i a 1, noticed the injured eye. She sent the boy back to his classroom, telling him to return if the eye pained him. Later in the afternoon, a -ording to the report, Ronald's eye became in- Reds Horn In On Honking Chicago Tribune Foreign Service MOSCOW Moscow drivers' most fascinating sport honking the horn at pedestrians has been ordered banned. After Aug.

1, it will be igainst the law for any one except ambulance drivers, TRAGEDY UPON TRAGEDY Supreme Court ordered Royal reinstated as chief. Buday called Royal's pay claim a "hijacking attempt." In other actions, the Council: Resolved to give the superintendent of the city incinerator power to hire and fire his personnel "in the interests of more efficient operation." Approved a master plan for a new housing development which will get $1,444,000 in Federal aid. Ronald flamed and swollen. Hiss Ponicka had him lie down and applied ice to the eye. Ronald was dismissed from fire truck drivers and geese to honk within this city.

Fire Hit-Run Driver Kills Boy, 10, on Bicycle BY ROBERT DE WOLFE Free Tress Staff Writer Death had a double partner Tuesday on the Willow Run Expressway and Belleville Road in Van Buren Township. While Spencer Hargraves was looking at the scene of an accident fatal to a farmer, his only son, Arnold, 10, was killed by a hit-run driver as he rode his bike less than two miles away. Double coincidence kept piling; Japan Fires First Rocket school at the regular time. When he got home, his mother had him taken to Saratoga General Hospital. Two days later an operation OJOJI-HARA, Japan (JP) Japan's Defense Board fired its first experimental rocket Tues- was performed in an attempt to trucks and ambulances here don't use sirens.

Honking the horn is an old Moscow institution. Scholars still are debating which came first, the auto or the horn. Many insist the horn was invented first, for entertainment purposes, and that a clever resident of Omsk, here on a visit, saw the possibilities of putting it on wheels. save the sight of the injured eye, but it was not successfuL iday. The rocket, four feet long and weighing 352 pounds, roared into ud in the twin tragedies.

The an overcast sky from a rail-type boy was pronounced dead on ar launcher. Officials said the rocket split apart at about 12,000 feet. Both the Board and the City were notified formally of the injury by "Attorney James K. O'Leary, who was retained by the Chases. RONALD'S PARENTS were told by Dr.

Albert E. Vossler that the injured eye must be removed as soon as possible or Turn to Page 2, Colnmn 2 You'll Find: I Record Hot Spell rival at Wayne County General Hospital but was unidentified. It finally was his mother, a hospital employe, who made the identification when someone had a hunch it might be her child. It's So Easy to place a Free Press Want Ad. All you need do is call WO 2-9400 and ask for an ad-taker, say "Charge it." Your Want Ad message will go into almost a half million homes.

Whether you want to buy, sell, rent, hire, trade or find, you'll be pleased with the excellent results of Free Press Want Ads. Call WO 2-9400 today. FREE PRESS WANT ADS Grips Red China I HONG KONG () Red Cliina'a State Council Tuesday issued emergency orders to all factories to adopt measures to protect workers against an extreme heat wave. Arnold lived with his parents Report Sinkings Amusements 21 Astrology 33 Bridge 17 Comics 32-33 Drew Pearson 17 Editorials 8 Financial 12-14 Jumble Word Game 29 Movie Guide 26 Radio and Television 31 Sports 23-26 Want Ads 27-30 Women's Pages 15-19 HONG KONG (JP) Peiping Radio said Tuesday five Nation- a Radio Peiping said the sum in a trailer camp at 8701 Belleville Road near Robson Road, north of Belleville. Two boys riding with him told authorities that a light green 1949 or 1950 Ford smashed into Turn to Page 9, Column 4 mer heat now surpasses all alist Chinese planes sank two records of the last 100 years and Red Chinese fishing boats off many accidents are caused by the Fukien coast Sunday morn- workers fainting from heat.

ing, injuring one fisherman..

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