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Coughlin, Plymouth Tie; Newport, Exeter Win At Night A Paper For The Home 46TH YEAR — NOi 49 — 90 PAGES SUNDAY INDEPENDENT Hembnr AndJt Bnttma nt nrrnltiiatt WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1952 UNITED PREia Wira Xa«n MtitliM —hundiy Independent Photagra{>h by Paul Bleley ^ It's Unanimous—GAR Touchdown by Salvaterra It'» unaniinouN with thp officials. Penn WiUiams. foreground, Mickey Noonan. riifht, and Jinuny Newman, lift, as <,.\R'u second touchd9wn .yesterday afternoon at Lincoln Stadium, >aiiticoke. IS registered by Cory Salvaterra. Wyoming Valley All Scholastic back of 1951. The goal line pileup is bent toward the playing field with Salvaterra down mider and safely across in the scecond quarter aa the Heights lad* toppled the Nantlooke squal, S7-0. GRAFT, PAYOFFS IN TAX CASES Fine Hints at State For Sewage Plants Here Truman^ Eisenhow In Bitter Exchang The Weather Today: Ooiudy, coM. Monday: Cloudy, colder PRKJE FIFTEEN CENTS Accuse Each Of/»eri^L?s"l Over Berlin, Korea; Both Speak in West OAKLAND, Calif.—President Truman charged yesterday that Dwight D. Eisenhower was partly to blame for the Korean war and the Russian blockade of Berlin. EN ROUTE WITH EISEN¬ HOWER—Dwight D. Eisenhower opened a sulphurous counter-at¬ tack on President Truman last night, saying "another campaign- In a speech prepared for delivery er" i* touring the West firing at a Democratic party rally '" "" A ray of hope for Wyoming Valley's river-bordering munici¬ palities now under orders from the commonwealth to build costly sewage disposal plants, - camie yes¬ terday when Gov. Jobn S. Pijie said that at some future date thc state may have to malce 'liberal loans" to hard-presiied communi¬ ties unable to stand the cost of building sewage treatment in¬ stallations. WASHINGTON — The Internal I AU of the valleys boroughs and Revenue Bureau has discovered!cities, which dump waste into the «28 cases of pay-offs and graft inj Susquehanna River a clean its nation-wide drive against jn-istream target waterway—are ai- come tax evasion by racketeersi''<^ady on record as being finan and crooks, it was disclosed yes-^cially unable to go through with Racketeers, Crooks Face Penalties For False Returns terday, A report on the bureau's special tax fraud drive showed that assess- iiienls totalling $2,180,351 in back taxes and penalties were slapped against receivers of graft and pay¬ off money during the fiscal year ending June 30. Some Bribes Although the bureau did not say so, same of this money presum- the construction of plants that will meet the requirements speci fied by tlie state. City in Same FU Even Wilkes-Barre, the biggest municipality in the area, has voiced, through its officials, its inability to go aiiead with a treat¬ ment plant unless it geta relief from some source. Plans prepared five years ago •bly went to public officials. How-i show that WUkes-Barre wUl need ever, some of the easaa may havel* P'ant costing at least $7,500,000 Involved labor racketeering ori^nder present-day prices. Even other types of "pay offs." The I when the plana were prepared, it bureau wiU not discuss the nature|wa« estimated that a treatment of any of the cases. plant for the city would cost $5 Pay-offs and graft were only}'"'I"on- part of a number of racket-type! Oov. Fine's hope-raising com- caset which received special at-ment on the possibility of sewage ^tention from tha bureau last year. 'The racket-busters actively closed 1.1,1110 cases involving lUegally- Uisposal aid to hard-pressed com munities was made at Harrisburg before a special preas conference gained money and added morel for delegates to the convention of jthan $91,000,000 In assessments and I Pennsylvania Newspaper Publlsh- ^nalties on Uncle Sam's tax books.ierg' Association. Collection* I'p i '^*'® governor also told the pub- The bureau said 266 graft cascs;''**'^" ^'^^ public apaUiy is ham- It closed last year netted the gov-'P^^ns Pennsylvania's civU de- ernment $],64.S,8,30 in additional tax;''""'"' acUvUies. assessments and penalties, while' On civil defense, he said it ap- H8 cases investigated showed noiP'^^ed to him that the American SAYS STEVENSON 'Murderers' Row' Will Run Senate, He Tells Meeting tax deficiency. Fourteen cases are ¦till being Investigated in which "jeopardy" assessments of $531,521 have been made. The bureau makes a "jeopardy" tisrument In an Incoma tax be peoplt would have to have a Iximb dropped on them before they would be aroused from their ap¬ athy. He said that the civil de fense set-up In Pennsylvania is not anywhere nearly developed to ST. PAUL, Minn.—Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson charged last night the top-to-bottom Republican victory urged by his presidential rival would turn the United States Senate over to a "murderer's row" of reaction and ruin. The Democratic candidate said It would confirm his charge that the "Old Guard" is in complete control o^ the Repu^can JParty and Its nominee, Dwight 'D. Eisen¬ hower. Address Joint Rall.T Stevenson leveled the charge In a speech prepared for delivery be¬ fore a big Democratic-Fartner Labor party rally in St. Paul last night, as the cUmax of a three- speech aerial swing into Iowa and Minnesota. At Fort Dodge. Iowa, he called Eisenhower a "me-too" candidate running on a "yes-but" platform and said the Republican record on farm policy proves the party is not to be trusted with the future. In a Minneapolis speech earlier he held out the sf>ectre of another! depression if tha Republicans should win the November elec tion. Charging that Eisenhower "seems to have embraced or been embraced by the most reckless and embittered wing of his party,' Stevenson recaUed the general's campaigning across Wisconsin with Sen. Joseph R. McCorthy, a candidate for re-election. Senate Leaders It is the "Old Guard" in the Senate that makes up the "mur¬ derer's row," he .said, adding that they would be in control of im¬ portant senate committes if Eis¬ enhower wins his top-to-bottom victory. As membera of the "murder¬ er's row," and the Senate com¬ mltees they would head, Steven¬ son listed the following: Labor—Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, "champion of Taft-Hartley, with which everyone disagrees in some measure. " Banking—Sen. Homer Capeheart of Indian, "champion of the real 'estate lobby." I Government Expenditures—Sen. IJoseph R. McCarthy of Wiscon- isin. "champion of the inquisition, champion of trial by ordeal and slander." ! Finance (which handles foreign PARIS — Rita Hayworth an-entourage and aee no chance of a'trade matters)-Eugene D. Milli- nounced yesterday that living withj reconciliation with hjm. jkln of Colorado,_"champion of the Prince Aiy Khan bpred her. "I do not plan to press any new Protective tariff. ^Th. aetress flounced out of ^uit for immediate divorce, but at! PuWicWor*^^^^^ Aly's villa in a buff, ending thea'the same time I have no '"tention | ofWa^hlngtoivc^^^^^^ of the wwk-old reconciliation. !of abandoning the divorce nro-iPi-'vate power lobibes. at the Municipal Auditorium here, Mr. Truman said tho Republican presidential candidate, aa Army chief of ataff, recommended in 1947 that U. S. troopa be with¬ drawn from Korea. The President also said Eisen¬ hower, as over-all commander, had the responsibility in 1945 for ar¬ ranging an agreement in the field with Russian genial* for free access to Berlin. Charges Breach of Trust In the second of two attacks on the GOP presidential candidate yesterday. President Truman ac¬ cused him of abusing the trust placed in him aa a five-atar gen¬ eral by now pouring out a "wave of filth" and "falsehoods" against the administration's foreign policy. Mr. Truman earlier, at a party luncheon in San Francisco's Palace | ing about him. Hotel, said Eisenhower was the "saddest speceacle" of a great gen¬ eral who has "betrayed himself byir,''n'^' surrenders to narrow, selfish men „, . . „ .,..__ and short-sighted policies." »* pictured Gov. AjMai E. Stev- -,^, », enson, the Democratic presidential T K*Tu f^*".. . , .. nominee, as Mr. Truman'a "hand- .l!;„'u°!^-:J!!''nfi.^rr°°r..^!)f.'ji!liSi<=ked candidate.- and .aid that Stevenson and Mr. Truonan to gether wiere running a campaign that was "aound without sub¬ stance, howls without bannony." SRys Stevenson an Edto 'noisy hut harmless blanks The Republican presidential nominee, speaking at Fargo, N. D., did not mention the President by nama. But hia meaning waa clear. Mr. Truman apok* In Fargo last Monday and Eisenhower, speaking from the field house of the North Dakota Agricultural College, a<Jcnowledged that- the Presldient had eome to town ahead of him. Shot at Befor* He aaid he understood the Pres¬ ident had "fired aalvo after red- hot salvo." at him. Regarding, the Preiid«nt'a "giva-em-lieU" stump techni<)ue as "amuaing," tii* GOP presidential nomine* aaid, "Vva been shot at by. real artUlery. This waji an asid* to friends who may have been worriied about what the Preaident had been say ab Oogc, Sb 3 b Nelson 1 Morgan. 8b 0 Reese, s* 4 Snider, cf 4 Robinson, Zb 4 Campanella, c 3 Pafko, If S Hodges, lb 2 Furillo, if 2 Blaclt.p 1 a Shuba 1 Rutherford, p 0 ToUU 28 JfEW YORK (A> I'm far too old to be disturbed j by noisy harmless blanks," h* con- speeches Mr. Truman praised Call forula's Gov. Earl Warren as "too much of a liberal" for the Repub¬ licans. "He ought to be a Demo¬ crat." "He is a sad and pathetic spec¬ tacle." Mr. Truman said of Eisen¬ hower at Oakland. "But this is more than a per¬ sonal tragedy. It is a danger to our national security.' MeanwhUe Eisenhower issued a statement calling Stevienson an "echo" for Secretary of State of Dean Acheson and an "apologi-it"' for the administration's foreign policy. McDougald Rizzuto, SS Mantle, cf Mize, lb Collins, lb Berra, c Woodllng, Bauer rf Martin, 2b Reynolds, p Totals Sb If ab 3 2 3 3 0 4 3 4 3 S h 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 • 2 0 0 0 5 0 4 2 10 1 0 0 0 All Even Again 4 24 10 h 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 o 0 1 4 4 1 12 1 1 2 1 Yankees Beaf Joe B/cfck, 2-0, For Reirnolds Durable Allie Reynolds, wiio marched from the Wilkes-Barre Barons of the Eastern League to the majors, pitched the Yankees to a four-hit, 2-0, victory over the Dodgers yesterday and deadlocked the World Series at two games tipiece. In a magnificent pitching battle 28 4 27 a—iFlied out for Black in 8th b—Struck out for Cox in dth Soore by Innings Brooklyn (N) OOO 000 000—0 New York (A) 000 100 Olx—2 E—Martin, Reese. RBI—^Mize (Mantle scbred on Reese's error In Hth) Mr. Truman vigorously defend-1 The unusual statement on for- •d hts administration's foreign [eign policy was apparently in- policy as to Korea, China and Europe. The President accused Elsen¬ hower of expounding "the usual Republican Une" when he recent¬ ly attacked administration poUciea in Berlin and Korea. Personally Involved Mr. Truman said the Joint chiefs (Continued on Pag* A-14) tended to counter President Tru¬ man's attacks on the former NATO commander. Mr, Truman iias said Eisen¬ hower "misled" the administration in 1945 when he said Russian pol¬ icy was guided by a desire to be frlenda with th* U. S. Yesterday, th* President said Eisenhower is (Continued on Pag* A-8) I 2B—Woodling, Mize SB—Mantle. HR—Mize. SH—Furillo, DP—Rizzuto-Martin-Mize LOB—Brooklyn S, New York 8. BB—Reynolds 3, Black 6, and Rutherford 1. SO—Reynolds 10, Black 2, and Rutherford 1. HO—Block S in 7, Rutherford 1 in L R and ER—Reynolds 0 and 0. Black 1 and 1. Rutiierford 1 and 1, W—Reynolds. L—Black. U~McKinley (A), plate; Plnelli with big Joa Black, in which both men were working with only two days of rest, Reynolds gained :he margin he needed on a fourth in ning homer by mighty old Jchn Mize, then picked up a comfcrt- Ing cushion tally in the eighth on a towering triple by Mickey Man tie and an error by Peewee Reese. Reynolds, the Yankees' best g clutch pitcher all season long, struck out 10 Dodger batters t.nd gave no extra base hits. Fight ng off the fatigue of bia arm. that is laden with bone chips at :he elbow, he actually seemed strong¬ er at the finish than at the start In golden Autumn sunshine be fore 71,787 thoroughly - thrilled fans at Yankee Stadium, the mus cular Migffl prnvldpfl Reynnlrt.^TOJtih the big run he needed with pne CN), IB Henoch ick T—2:33. Passarella (A), 3B: Boggieas CS), (A), foul Unes. A—71,787. 2B and , Ing Investigated in which the man!take care of an emergency—that or his monev n.lght disappear. jthe state would have to rely pri- M Fae* Prosecution marily on the National Guard. Th* rarket squads turned 25 oflWon't Offer Ta.x Plans ths pay-off cases over to the De-i Gov. Fine also reiterated that he partment of Justice for criminal!will not recommend any tax prosecution. More than $613.000lmeaaiures to the 1953 legislature In taxes and penalties are at stake] because it is a job for the legis- In these cases. 'lators after they get a report from The largest number of pay-off hi.f tax study committee. «ni1 graft cases were reported in! The governor noted wryly that Texas. The bureau said 42 were his proposed income tax was de- investigated in the Lone Star Stale, 41 in Indiana and ZH in lUi- Kois. .Seven states --South Dakota, Ver- nt, Rhode l.<iland. New Hanip- ire, Maine, Nevada and Montana —had no cases reported. One case earh was investigated in Arkan- sa-i. the District of Columbia. Con¬ necticut and Idaho, but no tax •leficiencies were found. feated by the last kgislaturc and that some members of the Repub¬ lican leadership "scampered away" from It during the controversy and left him "holding tt." "I am not wedded to any tax," he said, "if a tax Is found neces¬ sary." Tm going to let the legis¬ lature do something about it. I'm not going to be mous»t-t.rapped the next time." ! Rita Flounces Out on Aiy Again, This Time Over Press Coverage Miss Ha>-worth's lawyer con-jcedure 1 started In Reno pro- AgUculture Sen. George D. , . ^- . Aiken of Vermont, "champion of n^^med the new crackup of theirl Mme. Blum said Miss Haj-worth.jhg gliding scale 60 to 90 per cent ¦Ampestuous romance after thej was peeved at Aiy for-pcrmitting ,fj^y^) price supports." i^ince let it be known that their-the newsmen and photographers; Atomic energy—Sen. B. B. Hick- trial reconciliation wasn i workingito overrun the vUla a week ago. !(,nlooper of Iowa, "champion of ""t at all. I \ot Consulted I the abortive charge of 'incredible The movie actrcsi, had left theiri "The whole affair was «rgan- njismanagement' against the luxurious villa on the outskirts of! ized by my husband without con-atomic Energy Commisison." Paris and taken refuge in a hotel.isuiting nie," she was quoted. "I'Raps Endorsements Aiy called his attorney told himi can only repeat, my plans arc un-i stevenson charged that by em- he had fresh marital trouble.-;, andj changed, bracing aU GOP senate candi •cheduU-d a meeting for Monday "While they remain that way, to see what lo do next, ouigle Thought -^ little later Miss Hnyworth's U.S. Won't Fill Post At Moscow at This Time Ambassador Kennan Barred by Russians; No Break in Relations WASHTNOTON — Th* United States win leav* its Moscow* am¬ bassadors post vacant Indefinitely, Stat* Department sources said yesterday, but Is not coinsidering breaking off diplomatic relations with Russia. The Soviet's declaration that Ambassador George F. Kennan was persona non grata—^person¬ ally not acceptable—-prompted a new crisis in the cold war, and the United States was expected to make clear this week how this government will retaliate. Not Before Jan. 20 Both President Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson were reported to oppose appoint¬ ment of a new am<bassa<^or to re¬ place Kennan before next Jan. 20, when a new administration takes over. Likev^se, they said, there is no serious coTisideratlon at the pres¬ ent time for retaliation "In kind" by demanding that Moscow with¬ draw the new Soviet ambassador to Washington, Georgi N. Zarubin. First step of formal retaliation Is expected to be a stiff diplo¬ matic note, now in preparation, denouncing t h * Russian move against Kennan, 48-year-old ca¬ reer diplomat and foremast U. S. expert on Russia. Acheson Doused Acheson, who has already de¬ nounced th* Russian demand for Kennan's recall, may further vent his feeling on th* matter In a speech Monday at PitUburgh be¬ for* a convention of th* Interna¬ tional Union of mectrlcal, radio and Machin* Work*rs (CIO). U. S. diplomats regard th* epi¬ sode aa very serious but none at>- p«ared to believe it forecast any warlike moves by the Soviet. Acheson said he would not honor Moscow's formal recall de- man,(i, hut acknowledged It wlll be impossible to return Kennan to the most sensitive job in the U. S. foreign service. Hennan In Geneva Kennan, author of the U. S. world-wide policy of Communist containment," was in Geneva, Switzerland, when he heard about what amounted to his banishment from Russia. He had been in Moscow only since May 8. Mrs. Kennan and their two chil¬ dren were In Moscow. Reports from the Russian capital said they were packing and expected to fly Tuesday to Germany, wliere Kennan will meet them. The State Department said Kennan was expected to arrive here In about two weeks for "con sultation." Formally, Moscow demanded Kennan be taken away because he allegedly made "slan.derous" and "hostile' remarks about lif* in Russia, which he compared to Nazi Germany. Acheson defended Kennan vigorously on this point, saying hia observations were "truthful. World Series Facts, Figures Fourth Game Attendance—71,787. Net receipts—$322,518.24. Commissioner's share — $48,- 277.83. Players' share—$164,484.81. Clubs' and leagues' share — W09,656.40. Four-Game Totals Attendance—207,138. Net receipts—$980,389.00. Commissioner's share, $146,- 959.80. Players' share—$500,003.28. Clubs' amd leagues' share — $333,335.52. Series standing: Dodgers 2, Yankees 2. Today's Oame Yankee Stadium, 2:05 P.M. EST. Probable pitchers — Dodgers: Carl Erskine (14-8); Yankees: EweU Blackwell (4-12). Weather forecast — fair and cool. Expected attendance—70,000. Remaining games— Sixth game tomorrow at Eb¬ bets Field. Brooklyn. Seventh game (if necessary) Tueeday at Ebbets Fleld. majestic sweep of his bat. Georgia sTrikes and one ball when Johnny swung with vengeance. The ball Jawn, who Is in the autumn of his;'""'^*ied gracefully into the lower o*n career, crashed his jecdndlseats about 20 rows deep. series homer in as many dfiys.t It was a real Babe Ruth type but this one was vastly more lm- °' homer. portant. For It provided Reynolds, the Oklahoma Indian, with bis ffth Worid Series triumph, more -tlian any other hurler now active In the majors. And it again demonstrated the strategy brilliance of Manager Casey Stengel, who decided to in sert the 40-year-old lumbeiing battler into the lineup insteac of Joe CoUins. Collins on Bench Before the game it was expecfted that any of four other Yankee players would be out of the lineup with injuries. Instead Collins who is hale and hearty, but who Valley Scene Heights couple who blow their automobile horn eaeh time they paes Eaat End Boule¬ vard eemetery in memory of two good friends— —who ar* buried there. Publie Square restaurant owner who gave his employees a hard time last Sunday for failure to change tlie establish¬ ment's eloek to standard time being reminded yesterday that his wristwateh continues to operate on DST. Forty Fort High School musician falling through bass drum during excitement of firat touchdown nn Friday and requiring medical attention for a lacerated jaw. Cen, Krueger's Daughter Held for Death Of Colonel-Husband, Hero of K orean War Point grad- 26 years in Smith, 45, a West uate and veteran of the Army, was chief of the plans and operations division of the United Nations commander's logls tics (supply) section. He had twice won the Silver Star for gallantry dates, including Sen. William E. there's no reason why I should Jenner of Indiana who caUed not maintain friendly relations Gen. George C. Marshall a front- with the father of my child." Iman for traitors, the Republican 'awyer. Suzanric "BhlmV'discrosed Miss Hay^vo^th told Mme. Blum|presidentii.l candidate has "cheap- that her client had had th.,- samel she intended to go to Spain forj ened" the time-honored custom of Wea. She quoted the Hollywood!a few days. 'P°"'^'^*' ^?.'*°"'""Ti " .,), «fo« •lar as savine I The prince telephoned his law-: in his Minneapolis speech, i>tcv- ., , „, i „ „ , "lam hr.,.J^5' .V, I. w ji.lvflr Rntrer Palmieri for a talklenson said he didn't want to rumof two teen-aged children was The Smiths were the parents of am bored with my husband sj.ver Roger ^P^ami>e^|; ! thi' 1952 campaign against Her-lordered held for "observation" asjtwo children. Sharon Kay, 15. andjin action. I Breezewood and L-ttleton 'i "Tlie prince said to me, 'It isn't'bert Hoover, the Republican^who her husband^ CoL^ubreyD-^Sniith,,Aubrey D^ jr.. 17. who Hve ini _-nie slight and graying colonel!changes of the Turnpike TOKYO —The Army took Intoi Clark's headquarters did not iden- custody the daughter of Gen. Wai- tlfy the colonel's wife further, but ter Krueger, famed World War II In San Antonio, Texas, Mrs. Krue- assault commander, and said she ger, wife of the retired general "allegedly" stabbed her colonel-j who was assault commander for husband to death In their fashion-1 (ien, Douglas MacArthur in World able To ryo home. (War II, said she was their daug^- The slender, dark-haired mother Iter, Dorothy Jane. Todaij's h Classified I'Mitoi'iai featur,. I* Alovie„ ObituHrv Radin **«eial ..., ^IWrts Hlii ilCP B—11 ij—ri B—7 c—n A—H C—10 C—I B—I wo-kinir out at al!'" the lawyer'was President when the depres-.4!J, of Gen. Mark Clark's staff, died jTokyos exclusive Washington idled In Tokyo Army Hospital at' The bus, carrying 16 passengetrs. the aisle. I workji my wav back said "I a'^ked him' what ivo wa-^Uion hit in 1929. But he picturedot knife wounds m an Army ho8-|Heights section. |6 a. m. Saturday, about six hours was bound for Pittsburgh. and then the sho.-k hit me"and I eoine to do about i> ar.d he told'the Republicans of today as partlpittl. : Krifeger commanded all major;after the midnight stabbing. The dead were Adres Be-tU collapsed." me 'I dont knoiv at all that's and parcel of the same pauern ¦ The Army withheld details, but|assaults for MacArthur in thel Mrs. Smith was rushed to the,Bjelvert. 39, Lysvik, Sweden: Mrs. A German onvsician, Dr Karl whvlw-ant to see vou right away.-1 Thc Democratic presidential,a terse a.inouncement from Clark'sjSouthwest Pacific campaigns. He;8167th Station Hospital at 1:30 Jennie M. Thomas, Fort Wayn«„ Kerschner.'2''.'wn-* was enroute to He sounded very sad and dis- candidate recalled that m 1927. j t ar h,ast command headquarters commanded the Sixth Army from, a. m. Saturday for observation. A Ind.. and Wilbur Freeman Wil-California h-lped comfort th* in liams. 42. Lovington. 111. David more seriously mjured. witness** :tressed. I sounded He was d'istraught, and'1928 and harassed on | ministration let the forces ot extremely tOontinued on Page recalled that in 1927,1 Far East command headquarters'commanded the Sixth Army from; a. m. Saturday for observation. 1929. a Republican ad-,said the Korean war hero died 1943 to 1948 and headed ttacka J hospital official said she "is in-'from knife wounds "allegedly in-jfrom New Guinea to th^- Phillp-igood condition, but she may flicted" by his wife, Dorothy, 39. pines. under observation for some time." in Somerset Hospital of a fi has an inglorious .000 batting av¬ erage for the series, was told to sit it out. It became apparent early that it probably would take a sudden thrust by one team or another to decide this pulsating struggle. For neither Reynolds, nor Black, who gave up only three hits be¬ fore going out for a pinch-hitter in the eighth, appeared ready to yield a split inch. Both were sharper and faster than in the first game when Black was the winner with a six-hitter. Mize, built like a football tackle, strode to the plate and the usual ripple of excitement that he touches off went through the tense crowd. Black fooled him twice and the count was two Snider Snares Clout Black, unnerved and flustered, then pitched another fat one to Yogi Berra, who connected for a tremendous blast to extreme right center. It looked good for at least a triple but Duke Snider came up . with the fielding classic of the series—one that will be long re¬ membered. He ran across half an acre of pasture onto the red cin¬ der path that skirts the outfield, reached up high and gloved the ball, then tumbled over. It was an Instant before the crowd realized he had actually caught the ball but he came up (Continued on Page A-8) MIG's Range Far South To Engage Allied Jets TOKYO. Sunday — Red MIG's sarge on a Saturday morning dog- ranged far beyond their usual; fight between four MIG's and 1 haunts to tackle U. S. Navy plaies. American Skyraiders and Corsairs, over northeast Korea yesterday.[Rare Sortie and in other dogfights closer | The MIG's made a rare if not home seven of the enemy fighters, unprecedented sortie to the north- were downed or damaged by | eastern coastal area 25 miles above American Sabrejets. jthe port of Wonsan to chaUenge The U. S. airmen destroyed two ithe Navy planes. MIG's and crippled five In fourj F-84 Thunderjets carried out the separate clashes over northwest istri'tes on the Ommunist miUtary Korea. Thirty-five MIG's tried academy 25 miles southeast of desperately to fend off Allied Pyongyang, the capital city, and fighter-bomber raid* on a No:-th the coal mine northeast of Kunu Korean military academy and aj'n the Chongchon VaUey of North- coal mine. west Korea. The returning airmen reported , . I good results. Dwindhng ground action chur- xhe weekly summary said Sabre- acterized the Allied recapture ofj jets shot down nine MIG's. prob- Big Non HIU on the western front, ably destroyed one and damaged The 8th Army first reported thej 15 jn the week ending Oct 3. much fought-over height was,Allied losses were listed as ona found abandoned and taken wi th' gabrejet and one Australian twin- no resistance. Later it said thc I jet Meteor shot down by MIG*. Allies took It in "a bitter flghtj one Thunderjet and one Skyraider with two enemy squads." Uhot down by anti-aircraft fire Navy officials awaited a fuller and a Sabrejet and a Thunderjet report from the U. S. carrier Kes.r- lost to "unknown causes." Girders Rip Bus Like Can Opener; 4 Persons Killed, 10 Injured SOMERSET. Pa.—A Greyhound; tured skull three hours after the bus, speeding westward on Pern-1 crash. Pvt. Cecil Goines, 22, Pontiac, Mich., enroute home after two year's duty in Europe, said "it was the bloodiest wreck I've ever seen." sylvanla's "dream hlghwa/' rammed into a trailer truck it was attempting to pass yesterday, kjll ing four persons. Three passengers were killed In stantly as the truck's heavy load gtrmnge CMtn «iL''*o?thfhu,*'?ik°T,?.n/l^n' "There was a kind of strange ^n»r ^Ltw nllri t ! tn.n^ .^! «»!«« ^ the bus," he said. "Hard- °^ ,T AJiotherdiedtaaho9pi.al anybody screamed. I was and 10 others were Injured. i ¦* .1 li/^ o^-ii^xvii.cu. . ««» -, , I wedged between two seats. There District Attorney Frank A. Or-|„^ ^ man beside me but he was ban jr., directed state police tol<jgj^^ file involuntary mamslaughler charges against the bus <lrivBr, „„^^„„,,„ t,„.„,f., „hh, „;-„- Norman Crider, 24, York, r^jCoxrnnuni^y HospiUl with mmor who escaped with a bruised knpe Third In 85 Days (3oines was detained at Somerset injuries. Lt. WUIiam L. Dutton, 30, Hol- „ , , . , ^ , I .lywood, Calif, who also was in- The crash was the third lnvolv-| j^^ed in the vaeck. was travelling ing a Greyhound bus on the famedi^.jt}, j,;, ^.jf^ Phyllis..who was Pennsylvania Turnpike, a highj „<,t ^urt. Dutton had recently re- speed toU highway, within 36^t„j.ned from Army duty in Ger- °*y*- I many and was enroute home. Two persons were killed In a; Like Oan Opener similar crash at Donegal, Pa.. 12- -i was sleeping," Dutton said, miles frftm the scene of today's; "but the terrific crash jolted me accident, Sept. 18, and 10 v/ere! awake. It looked as if a giant can hurt Aug. 30 when a bus hit aj opener had run down the right steel-carrying truck between "le-side of the bus." intpr-, "There was an old woman on th* ': floor, dead—sort o. sprawled in be,Roberts, East Orange. N J. died^said. He was admitted to Somer- ac- set Hoapital with minor injuries.
Object Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 46 |
Issue | 49 |
Subject |
Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) - Newspapers Luzerne County (Pa.) - Newspapers |
Description | An archive of the Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent newspaper. |
Creator | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Publisher | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Place of Publication | Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) |
Date | 1952-10-05 |
Location Covered | Pennsylvania - Luzerne County |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For more information, please contact the Osterhout Free Library, Attn: Information Services, 71 S. Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701. Phone: (570) 823-0156. |
Contributing Institution | Osterhout Free Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER LIBRARY: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 10 |
Day | 05 |
Year | 1952 |
Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 46 |
Issue | 49 |
Subject |
Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) - Newspapers Luzerne County (Pa.) - Newspapers |
Description | An archive of the Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent newspaper. |
Creator | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Publisher | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Place of Publication | Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) |
Date | 1952-10-05 |
Date Digital | 2011-01-04 |
Location Covered | Pennsylvania - Luzerne County |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by Backstage Library Works. Archival Image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from film at 300 dpi. The original file size was 34126 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For more information, please contact the Osterhout Free Library, Attn: Information Services, 71 S. Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701. Phone: (570) 823-0156. |
Contributing Institution | Osterhout Free Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER LIBRARY: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text |
Coughlin, Plymouth Tie; Newport, Exeter Win At Night
A Paper For The Home
46TH YEAR — NOi 49 — 90 PAGES
SUNDAY INDEPENDENT
Hembnr AndJt Bnttma nt nrrnltiiatt
WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1952
UNITED PREia
Wira Xa«n MtitliM
—hundiy Independent Photagra{>h by Paul Bleley
^
It's Unanimous—GAR Touchdown by Salvaterra
It'» unaniinouN with thp officials. Penn WiUiams. foreground, Mickey Noonan. riifht, and Jinuny Newman, lift, as <,.\R'u second touchd9wn .yesterday afternoon at Lincoln Stadium, >aiiticoke. IS registered by Cory Salvaterra. Wyoming Valley All Scholastic back of 1951. The goal line pileup is bent toward the playing field with Salvaterra down mider and safely across in the scecond quarter aa the Heights lad* toppled the Nantlooke squal, S7-0.
GRAFT, PAYOFFS IN TAX CASES
Fine Hints at State For Sewage Plants Here
Truman^ Eisenhow In Bitter Exchang
The Weather
Today: Ooiudy, coM. Monday: Cloudy, colder
PRKJE FIFTEEN CENTS
Accuse Each Of/»eri^L?s"l
Over Berlin, Korea; Both Speak in West
OAKLAND, Calif.—President Truman charged yesterday that Dwight D. Eisenhower was partly to blame for the Korean war and the Russian blockade of Berlin.
EN ROUTE WITH EISEN¬ HOWER—Dwight D. Eisenhower opened a sulphurous counter-at¬ tack on President Truman last night, saying "another campaign- In a speech prepared for delivery er" i* touring the West firing at a Democratic party rally '" ""
A ray of hope for Wyoming Valley's river-bordering munici¬ palities now under orders from the commonwealth to build costly sewage disposal plants, - camie yes¬ terday when Gov. Jobn S. Pijie said that at some future date thc state may have to malce 'liberal loans" to hard-presiied communi¬ ties unable to stand the cost of building sewage treatment in¬ stallations.
WASHINGTON — The Internal I AU of the valleys boroughs and Revenue Bureau has discovered!cities, which dump waste into the «28 cases of pay-offs and graft inj Susquehanna River a clean its nation-wide drive against jn-istream target waterway—are ai- come tax evasion by racketeersi''<^ady on record as being finan and crooks, it was disclosed yes-^cially unable to go through with
Racketeers, Crooks Face Penalties For False Returns
terday,
A report on the bureau's special tax fraud drive showed that assess- iiienls totalling $2,180,351 in back taxes and penalties were slapped against receivers of graft and pay¬ off money during the fiscal year ending June 30. Some Bribes
Although the bureau did not say so, same of this money presum-
the construction of plants that will meet the requirements speci fied by tlie state. City in Same FU
Even Wilkes-Barre, the biggest municipality in the area, has voiced, through its officials, its inability to go aiiead with a treat¬ ment plant unless it geta relief from some source.
Plans prepared five years ago
•bly went to public officials. How-i show that WUkes-Barre wUl need ever, some of the easaa may havel* P'ant costing at least $7,500,000 Involved labor racketeering ori^nder present-day prices. Even other types of "pay offs." The I when the plana were prepared, it bureau wiU not discuss the nature|wa« estimated that a treatment of any of the cases. plant for the city would cost $5
Pay-offs and graft were only}'"'I"on- part of a number of racket-type! Oov. Fine's hope-raising com- caset which received special at-ment on the possibility of sewage
^tention from tha bureau last year. 'The racket-busters actively closed 1.1,1110 cases involving lUegally-
Uisposal aid to hard-pressed com
munities was made at Harrisburg
before a special preas conference
gained money and added morel for delegates to the convention of jthan $91,000,000 In assessments and I Pennsylvania Newspaper Publlsh- ^nalties on Uncle Sam's tax books.ierg' Association. Collection* I'p i '^*'® governor also told the pub-
The bureau said 266 graft cascs;''**'^" ^'^^ public apaUiy is ham- It closed last year netted the gov-'P^^ns Pennsylvania's civU de- ernment $],64.S,8,30 in additional tax;''""'"' acUvUies. assessments and penalties, while' On civil defense, he said it ap- H8 cases investigated showed noiP'^^ed to him that the American
SAYS STEVENSON
'Murderers' Row' Will Run Senate, He Tells Meeting
tax deficiency. Fourteen cases are ¦till being Investigated in which "jeopardy" assessments of $531,521 have been made.
The bureau makes a "jeopardy" tisrument In an Incoma tax be
peoplt would have to have a Iximb dropped on them before they would be aroused from their ap¬ athy. He said that the civil de fense set-up In Pennsylvania is not anywhere nearly developed to
ST. PAUL, Minn.—Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson charged last night the top-to-bottom Republican victory urged by his presidential rival would turn the United States Senate over to a "murderer's row" of reaction and ruin.
The Democratic candidate said It would confirm his charge that the "Old Guard" is in complete control o^ the Repu^can JParty and Its nominee, Dwight 'D. Eisen¬ hower. Address Joint Rall.T
Stevenson leveled the charge In a speech prepared for delivery be¬ fore a big Democratic-Fartner Labor party rally in St. Paul last night, as the cUmax of a three- speech aerial swing into Iowa and Minnesota.
At Fort Dodge. Iowa, he called Eisenhower a "me-too" candidate running on a "yes-but" platform and said the Republican record on farm policy proves the party is not to be trusted with the future.
In a Minneapolis speech earlier he held out the sf>ectre of another! depression if tha Republicans should win the November elec tion.
Charging that Eisenhower "seems to have embraced or been embraced by the most reckless and embittered wing of his party,' Stevenson recaUed the general's campaigning across Wisconsin with Sen. Joseph R. McCorthy, a candidate for re-election. Senate Leaders
It is the "Old Guard" in the Senate that makes up the "mur¬ derer's row," he .said, adding that they would be in control of im¬ portant senate committes if Eis¬ enhower wins his top-to-bottom victory.
As membera of the "murder¬ er's row," and the Senate com¬ mltees they would head, Steven¬ son listed the following:
Labor—Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, "champion of Taft-Hartley, with which everyone disagrees in some measure. "
Banking—Sen. Homer Capeheart of Indian, "champion of the real 'estate lobby."
I Government Expenditures—Sen. IJoseph R. McCarthy of Wiscon- isin. "champion of the inquisition, champion of trial by ordeal and slander."
! Finance (which handles foreign PARIS — Rita Hayworth an-entourage and aee no chance of a'trade matters)-Eugene D. Milli- nounced yesterday that living withj reconciliation with hjm. jkln of Colorado,_"champion of the
Prince Aiy Khan bpred her. "I do not plan to press any new Protective tariff.
^Th. aetress flounced out of ^uit for immediate divorce, but at! PuWicWor*^^^^^ Aly's villa in a buff, ending thea'the same time I have no '"tention | ofWa^hlngtoivc^^^^^^ of the
wwk-old reconciliation. !of abandoning the divorce nro-iPi-'vate power lobibes.
at the Municipal Auditorium here, Mr. Truman said tho Republican presidential candidate, aa Army chief of ataff, recommended in 1947 that U. S. troopa be with¬ drawn from Korea.
The President also said Eisen¬ hower, as over-all commander, had the responsibility in 1945 for ar¬ ranging an agreement in the field with Russian genial* for free access to Berlin. Charges Breach of Trust
In the second of two attacks on the GOP presidential candidate yesterday. President Truman ac¬ cused him of abusing the trust placed in him aa a five-atar gen¬ eral by now pouring out a "wave of filth" and "falsehoods" against the administration's foreign policy.
Mr. Truman earlier, at a party luncheon in San Francisco's Palace | ing about him. Hotel, said Eisenhower was the "saddest speceacle" of a great gen¬ eral who has "betrayed himself byir,''n'^'
surrenders to narrow, selfish men „, . . „ .,..__
and short-sighted policies." »* pictured Gov. AjMai E. Stev-
-,^, », enson, the Democratic presidential
T K*Tu f^*".. . , .. nominee, as Mr. Truman'a "hand-
.l!;„'u°!^-:J!!''nfi.^rr°°r..^!)f.'ji!liSi<=ked candidate.- and .aid that
Stevenson and Mr. Truonan to gether wiere running a campaign that was "aound without sub¬ stance, howls without bannony." SRys Stevenson an Edto
'noisy hut harmless blanks The Republican presidential nominee, speaking at Fargo, N. D., did not mention the President by nama. But hia meaning waa clear. Mr. Truman apok* In Fargo last Monday and Eisenhower, speaking from the field house of the North Dakota Agricultural College, a |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19521005_001.tif |
Month | 10 |
Day | 05 |
Year | 1952 |
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