Walkerton Independent, Volume 83, Number 25, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 19 May 1960 — Page 2
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- WALKERTON INDEPENDENT — May 19. 1960
< SPORTS CORNER/ I -**> ~—* s "' ' : y" .. 'J
THEA REALLY R\N Wll i • S.lurdax at tin Indmn | Motoi Spec Iway l lie qua’ fx im: rt ns for tin amm •: Mem' • I t'■ o(Mi Mile ! ;t< <■ I■ u r W n -st of th • t ’p-nanic dm i < li ti in? th? Hack lather c liv and t iking advantage of the t n-’ v.mthe’, H’ drivers took th' 10 li le ti ip to i eceive 1- (he- lon d fl g oid earn their post »n. r. the starting field ALL BIT FOUR < »F THESE 1g were < locked at speeds .Vci - aging over 111 miles pei hour. A new single lap nn-ord was set a I also a new four lap record v. s established by E Idi? Sachs, win wmed the tight to set on t! • pole i nine .Vay 30 Sa hs 1: rm-d the first lap of im ie z ti m 147 Saturday when hi flaw a omul the track avciaging f■ r ti > fastest lap on rm ord 1 17 251. H ■ also established the H)-m )c n rk of 146 592 in his Dean Van Lines Si eial These records hid been set by Jolmnv Thomson in last year’s qualifying runs. Ji: i Kathman. one of the top drivei s in the field, also spun around th 2' mile oval Saturday a* an average speed o.‘ owi 146 noli as heaveraged 146 371 h - ten-mile drive. oIINNY THOMPSON TRIED S t unlay to gain the p> but h i a little difficulty and made I IKiPLE I E ATI RE I RID Al A S ATI RD A A a Privates Affair < * MW >■ vCWt^Cg Hit No 2 '7 CO^JE w ^TTfEJETS - S I'onus Picture OOM-T »UM TWA RYAN IVES LOUSE ©AVer THE Q.UWAW^ 2 ilit- Sundax A Mtmdax MAA 22 A 23 «j he lost innocence .S,^:Wue ^mdcnh.r SSL r 1 CAPC-I BIANDON 1/ / * '/ \ M ACDOIsAIO ( o-llit—Sunday A .Monday HEARTTHUMPtHw adventures ^t4r wik smwwurf , 5 wwign to iga Hits Tues., Wrd A Thur* M A A 24, 25 A 24» e u aw»v. -4 Al 3 j LVI Pj kJ 711] 3 A lUKMj-gt.y, ‘ o-liit '< tun sday 57*^ <9*** NX,,. ■ - WP a» W w-oTX
l i r < . S inday with the same ■ h ■ . ve fioni the numbei ' : sp t l.i ’ year when he had t th- -e tw<> quahfying marks. H xi .'' according to the set-up a’ In lian ipops he >s forced ba< k .nt । the mh r \\' at i his neai record Ine.iking runs Sunday m he 1 -pi) »i ''i 6 quahfiei s on t h-. The d-1 ’ iX' Englander lined the 10 miles na s] of 1 16.4 13 ami had a s;i g] • lan of 147 107. THE CONDITIONS BEING g< *d Saturday and the dtivei.fighting fop the pole, made th l ' p> qualifiers racing around the oval to ;n average speed of 1 14 Saturday and xx ith t h • 6 moi Sumi ay even al slightly . loxvt r sp<H'd. the 22 cars still are averaging 141313 mph A little bit cf wind trouble hurt th*- di ivers Sunday as they were much moi ’ cautious and mo--of the diiver, shie-’ 'wy after Thompson and T »ny Bru. cn turned in their h times. \ late rush, before the eve g .. non was all that got the othei 4 cats in. THE ERONT FEW ROWS OF drivers that run Saturday and Sunday include very few strange names as the veterans grabbed the early spotlight They line up something like this to date: FIRST ROW Eddie Sachs, Jim Rathman and Roger Waid SECOND ROW Dick Rathman. I.en Sutton and Troy Rut’man. THIRD ROW: bxklie Jmhnsi n. Don Branson and Chuck Stevenson. FOI'RTH ROW danmy Biyan Don Fi ?a land and Lloyd Ruby FIFTH ROW: Johnny Boyd Bob Christie and Wayne Weilei SIXTH ROW A J Foyt Jr . Johnny Thomson and Tony Bettenhausen SEVENTH ROM Clark t Sho’ - 1v Ten-pieman. Gene Foice am! Bobby Gi EIGHT R< IT i An ink ONE NAME MISSING S 1-1 r that always creates inter - on i .ce day if he is the co p ■ of -ne of the powerful N ar." is Paul Russo Last y< . REES Plymouth. Indiana l lii isdax. I ridax A Satur “SAMSON ANP DELILAH” In T<*ehnieolor A H ink V| All RK HI LAM ARR. ..EO, S AND s The storv of the might mortal who ever lived AHo < otoi ('arfooti Sunday. Monday A iu< ^Liv “Never So Few" hi ('inemnwopr I RANK SIN ATKA, GIN A I.OI.LOBKK.II) A. Hl EX t M< QI EEN V slur* o| love nod ear! Oolor Cartom ^un R«v l>aftireal 4:15 6:30 4 H 45 p. m . Sf ARTS MAY *3 • HOME FROM THE HILL” Rom in mih in xi. » I J X NOR P XRKFR In < ini-in:m< o|m* A Color
as m the vens gone by I eforc Rus •• ha' hid tioub). whcthei in the supercharg'sl Novi or oh - ■ r Gir- He hid a ।ar assigneo bun for the rie?. but Sunday was out m the Nox i aga n and wa running t us powerful mu well until his supei harger blew uj which damag' d h:.- brak< < and forc* d hm fr- ■’ i the t rack It apiiears that Pud m ght trx to fp’alitx ihi * i come Saturday and it " dl again be a matter <u time t<» s> e if one or both of these n-ci hum u p-\x iu ho-ises i - in the field AFTER THE REMAINING 11 spots are filled, the bumping is s-t to begin Should the last I rows b- completed Saturday, the bump i : could push the av uagc times n well over the record noxv s‘ ml ng. The xx -ather wil’ be th >ig factor as for several year? rivers have had to almost wat< । oi one day or the trials be<ai ■ if this element. An en*”6 • 'ek will be killed re-che k ing • is and taking the last fexv t Gice runs dive to the fact that Memorial Day falls on a Monday. MOVIE REVIEWS From THE RIALTO “The FBI Story.” two-tim * I htzer Piize-winner Don White--1 ■ id's thrilling and authentc ac- < tint of the nation's most famous 1 x enforcement agency, has beer. • ought to the screen by Warne. Jroa. aei 1 opens today at the MALTO Theatre Starring in the Technicolor pi< - notion are two of Hollywood' tost popular stars. James Stcw.ll and Vera Miles. The film was • net ted and produced by Merx yn Leßoy .who has been responsible for some oi* the greats ' in motion picture entertainment ‘ The FBI Stoiy” traces the ]if of a typical young agent, h's hmiie life as well as his career xx ith the FBI. ParalL-ling hi st- iy is the development and gi-oxvth of the FBI fr 'in a struggling organization in 1924 to the outstandingly efficient opei.uioj it is today Include.! in the production ai such at timi-packetl events as g; ” battles xvith notorious gangsters Ji !m Dillinger, Pretty Boy' Fl >yd and ' Babx Fa< G' Nelson RIALTO Malkerliin Indiana llmrisdav I ridav. Saturday Max 19. 20. 21. 22 JAMES STEWART The itery behind the । Headlines THE STORY Vera Miles TECHNICOLOR Moil., T ur»„ Mai 23, 24 .11 LIE LONDON ‘ TilE 3id \ OK E”
and undercover work agents in solving murders yf Osage Indian.; in Oklahoma to obtain then on rights. Tim film vividly depicts th' early days when the midermanne organization worked is h n. . day, < iten i ever, da a week, t get th-ir jobs don - It shows h"X' the FBI during World W : li d ' counler-i spionag.- v. ork in S' ’ Ai u-ric n count'.' ; in who i G< I -» man sj :cs were op ia' .ng 1 storx is biought up to the pi ent xvith the FBI fighting ? : r> It ntl'-sely ns in wartime to tia< flown • . my agents wheievm th< y may be in the Pnited State todav Leßoy spent five xxeeks shouting m Washington, D C and New A’ork Citx His carmu -s will give moviegoeis an inside l<»«»R at th' amazing operation in the FBI H.-adqua'tern m Washingt'n where- th- evidence required to captuie and convict n < !inunal :s observed, collected and ai^lyz d I^-Roy was allowe I entry to the van >u.s division- of th- Bireau. including the largest crim * laboratory in the worlfi. equipped to handle any type of case; the ident fie it ion division in whn h more than 150 million di.'.erer? sets of finger [lints are on fm indexed and ci oss-mdexed; and t< the FBI firing ranges at nearby Quantico Virginia, wh -re agen’s are traine' to bis time experts m the u c of firearms Scenes wei •> also flmed xvith James Stewart and Vera Miles in a variety of locales in Washing ton. indudirj the Capitol, tile Lincoln Memor al. the Union Sta tion end a i " 'aurant on the Po toinac River. At the Lincoln Memorial. LeRoy took the first over-the-shoul-der shot ever made of Abraham Lincoln .Joe B hm-. director of cinematography, placed his camera atop Lincoln’s statue so that he was able to pick up th? right side of the <’ivd War President's face and arm He then photographed Stewart and Miss M les flriving by in tha street below xvith the Washington Monument in the background.
^SCIENCE IN Q YOUR LIFE A Gamble You Always Win America's free enterprise system has proved to the hilt the old raying that “competition is the life of trade. But our modern pharmaceutical industry has gone much further. Il has proved that competition means life itself. i When an electronics company conn« out with a new invention, you may get a more compact television ♦— — — — —
Bit with a bitter picture. But a scientific discovery that comes out ©I a pharmaceutical laboratory may cure a serious ailment atflicting you or someone in your family. Competition is keen in the drug Industry. Scores of firms each year pour millions of dollars into scientific research. They can't sit back, content to produce and marke' their tried and tru • products. They must constantly try to find improvements for established drugs or discover better mes. For if tht.v don’t, one of thtir competitors probably will. That’s the way fne competition works tinder our system. You've got to take financial risks to stay ahead of your business rivals. That's especially rue in the pharmaceutical field. The drug firms must keep up a constant search fur । better products, iur at any moment ■ a competitor may come up with a new compound that make* tht wonder drug of yesterday the hasbeen of today. » This ha, happened time after time. One firm, for example, risked J'.UOV.O'JV in a aiantifie rewearch program to prouuce cortisone through a lews expensive method than other companies used- by chemical prom^'4 instead of kxtrac'ing the e^mpuund from aiunul substances. The firm finaMy was SU Causal ul. It looked forward to i> lung and proU^uie remra ou iw huge gaub>. But within awy short time a comp?'mg cuiupanp found a v io produce cortisone nt even kw, < o»t. TL? first company Foon »aw its market dwindle io a fr. allot, of what it wa* originally. The a«me situation has developed in the fiel l of antibiotics -the seemingly miraculous drugs which haveknocl <*d much of th«dcadhn<-ss Ou l of a boat V1 UiftctiuUa diseases.
In New York Leßoy covered a considerable portion of the city as he photographed th? surveillance (f an enemy espionage agent by the FBI. It was a vastly complicated operation, requiring perfect timing, to c.lrn the ■> m ' m wa ch the FBI must Gib h the suspect jn the act of [ a >mg information to a confederate > Among the locales used were the Kingsbridge Station in the Bronx, the Yank > Stadium, (Xntial Park and the Broadway Joe Restaurant on West 46th Street. The Court Street Stat.on in Brooklyn, abandoned f, r subw x us'- n 1946, was refurbished and m ■<! to stimulate, the Bowling Green Station of the film. Also photographed was a Sunday lootball game between the New York Giants and the Washington F: dskins Heading the cast with the stars. James Stewart and Vera Miles, are Murray Hamilton. Larry Pennell. Nick Adams, Diane Jergens. Jean Willes, Joyce Taylor. Victor Millan and Parley Baer. | Get primed for the future while you're still in your prime. PREVENT FIRESI ... don't overload your wiring system! ttFABKYMVSi DON’T GIVI p ' FIRE A MACS TO START
f a f■ BL I ** m • I E3 The । ariy antibiotics, such at p« nicillin and streptomycin, । achieved a great break-through in ■ the war against disease. But theso : drugs were limited in action, hitting together only about 40 infections. Doctors needed antibiotics that could halt the attack of a broad range of duveasM. Maty private pharmaceutical laboratories entered the tf^enaivs rage to develop sgeh a drug. This costly competition produced just what the doctsr ordered — tho “broad-spectrum" antibiotics, like Terra my cin. These sompounds are highi;, efftetive Malawi nearly a hundred diseaoos. It is highly effeelive agamst xuat^* infections and vet it eliminates ar sharply reduces harmful side offeets. This kuid of keen competition wIU continue in our pharmaceutical industry. Some cwmpauiss will win and others will lom in the vast research gamble. But the American public is a sure winner. For, remember, when private reaoaroh develops the next wonder drug, the lift .1 sa» Vi may be your own.
