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r ' s TUIC IC U^IAZ IT UADDCiJCn MickeyManlle.Vanks:, (photoat left) I nid Id nw W I I riiMr r ClllCI/"''~dive9 head first back to second ha.se on attempted pickoff as ball .sails toward Red Schoendienst, Braves second baseman, in first inning of yesterday's game in Milwaukee. In next photo. Umpire Art Paparella calls Mantle safe as ball went wide of base. Third photo shows how Mantle upsets Schoendienst in sliding back to second as Schoendienst tries to lake wild pickoff throw from Pitcher Bob Buhl. Johnny Lo$;an, backRround, backs up play U Umpire Paparella watches. In forcRround is Braves' .loe Adcock (9) and Umpire Bill McKinley. In fourth photo .Mantle goes into third base safely as Schoendienst rolls on ground. Umpire Paparella follows hall. In foreground is Yogi Berra (S) Yanks catcher, who was on first base and advanced to second on Buhl's error. (Special United Press Telephoto Service.) A Paper For The Home SUNDAY INDEPENDENT Cloudy, Cool Highest Today 65 Monday—Cool, Showeri 51ST YEAR —NO. 50 Mi'mb^r Aiwlit Btir^na of Drrulntlna WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1957 rMTF.n PRKSR ^ ire >if*vii Sprrlco PRICE 20 CENTS Larsen Tames Braves As Yankees Pound Out J2-3 Series Victory Two Home Runs by Tony Kubek And ( ir uit Clout by Mantle Help Sadden Milwaukee Fans MILWAUKEE (IP)—Don Perfect Game Larsen. a master in World Series heroics, walked out of the l)ull-pen shadow.s .ve,sterday afternoon to pitch seven and one-third relaxed relief innings as the New York Yankees murdered the*.^ Milwaukee Braves, 12-3, in the third game of the I ; 'N.slc. i The Yankees, jumpiriR into a' 2to-l gamp lead before a bit-j tTly disappointed partisan ''rpves' crowd of 4.5.R04, turned their vaunted power loose on a parade of six Milwaukee pitchers in a nine-hit attack .sparked by Tony Kubok's two honip runs and an put-of-the park blast by (ore-leKged Mirkcy Mantle. Hank .Aaron, the National I p veiie home-run champion, chipped in with one for the Braves. And* .lohnnv Lopan's l-'dnff sinjrlt' in the fifth slopped I.arsen after he had retired soven men in a row to Racket Probers Plan to Call Employers Next Want to Study Anti-Union Acts Of Associations 'Helpful' Talk Held by Dulles With Red Envoy Clarify Positions On Major Subjects, Joint Release Says WASHINGTON OP) —Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A, Gromyko announced jointly last night that they had held "helpful" discussions on the Middle East, disarmament, Eu¬ rope and Russo-American rela¬ tions. That was the highlight of U.S.Will Not Hurry Own Satellite Plans Hoffa Plans Union Raids If Expelled AFL-CIO Ouster Can Bring Pressure On Smaller Groups MIAMI BEACH (IP)— union •lames R, Hoffa mapped a'who had retained Nathan W. Gromyko that Russian camiiaign yester-^S^'^ffc'Ti^n . . . and the role,dumping policies in the Middle m Plains be u.sed against ^}^^"^T^" IS if the AFL-CIO ex-i*",;"- . ,,. . ..... ^ .,. .u . . .. Kennedy outlined a tentative had telt that a meeting 'would $400,000 Commissions Paid Siaie Insurance Brokers by Auihoriiy Associate of M. Harvey Taylor Collected Big Share; Probe Is Planned by Secretary Blatt WASHINGTON OP) —The Senate Labor Rack ets Comrnittee will investi¬ gate "improper or illegal efforts" of certain employers to keep unions out of their plants, counsel Rol)ert F. Kennedy aaid yesterday. He said the committee'a next public hearings, beginning Oct. 21, will concern "certain anti-k activities of „.. _ . ,. HARRISBURG OP)—Penn.sylvania insurance Joint communique is"sued follow-!brokers have received between !i>300,000 and $100,000 ing a talk at Dulles' home that in conimi,s,sions from coverage written on General lasted nearly four hours, ;State Authority projects and equipment. As he shook hands and laid goodbye to Dulles. Gromyko stopped to tell reporters the con¬ versation had been "useful" on a number of problems, including the tension-ridden Middle East, and the disarmament stalemate. He said both sides had ex¬ plained and clarified their posi¬ tions on major topics. To Seek Clarifications Dulles, in advance of the ses- Three City Youths Hurt A. J, Caruso, GSA ex¬ ecutive director, turned over a sfiecial report to the authority's insurance com¬ mittee which showed the agency carried more than ,$168 million worth of insurance and paid nearlv $1 million. The report! iwas given to committee chair-i man Andrew M. Bradley, state^ property and supplies secretary. Three city students were in-J!,"*' Internal Affairs .Secretary Blatt who had spe¬ lt last Aug. Presideni Not Surprised: Diplomais, Scieniisis Express Keen Concern (Related'stories on Page 2, Section 2) WASHINGTON OP)—The Soviet conquest of outer space will not force the United States to speed it* efforts to launch an American-made moon, the Whit* House announced yesterday. President Eisenhower took the historic Soviet triumph calmly and wa,^ not surprised. White House spokesman James C. Hagerty said. The President remained at his Gettysburg farm and played golf but kept in telephone ccm- tact with Washington aides. Diplomatic and scientific offi¬ cials assessing the world-wide implications of the Russians' achievement admitted concern They said the .«iz« of the Soviet satellite ahows Russia Moscow Plans Moon Flight 'In Few Years' No Soviet Boasting On Beating U. S. to 1 Major Space Punch ' MOSCOW (IP) — Soviet employers sion, had been prepared to warn' -¦-' -— ^¦¦= — iOenevieve .... , .. .,,.,,,^., »., i....... .,...,.,.... « r,,,„ ,,„v. .^.«...^u ..athan W. Gromyko that Russian arms jured in an automobile accident,,:,, -._,,„,„j World NerVe"" m,s'"'jr'^4l! Gliding Campaign yesler-'Shefferman ... and the role,dumping policies m the Middle ;„ Plains, late last night. One 28. ^ requested aHded to the 27 he set down^^.day to be used against Sh/Jf^T^" •"<» »>*• .tafrEast could lead to war jwas admitted and two others Secretary Blatt had a.sked, ..... bis no-hit. no-run eame against other unions if the AFL-CIO ex-; P,;"' _. „. ^ .... L The conimunique said the two!|,gatgj and discharged by Gen- for the report fo determine if jSCiontlsts who carried man the Dodgers last vear. pels the Teamsters'for electing P""*°y °"'''"«° ,"^*"*3''J'*^"^'',.,'^''*"^^ '"**''"«...^"^'"ieral Hosoital the states building and borrow-iinto the age of space Br.-.ves Strand 14 him president. jschedue which would keep the enable them to seek clanficationje"'""*?''^^^^^^ „f 2? rrnve '"« *««"':-V insurance practices flight yesterdav set their But this was small consola- Hoffa, swept into office by committee busy most of the'of the intentions and positions! John Donnino. 16, of 22 Grove ^^,erg'^ound. She -~--^f.-~n..|-'"*^"'^ yesieiaa.v .set cneir tion to the Braves' rooters—see- an overwhelming vote despitelf*"- " apparently left no time ing fhe first World Series game mounting corruption charges,!'^'' ""M extended retum engage- in Milwaukee's baseball hisforv. expected to get the rest of hisl"'^"'°''***"'/'^'" P'"**'°^."*-8'*^' They squirnred as the Braves;slate of vice presidents elected James R. Hoffa, swept into of- filled fhe bases four times and,before the Teamster convention pot only one run out of it andicloses. « howled dismally as 14 stranded;Delegates Resting Milwaukee base-runners tied a Delegates took a day off from!j^;aming by the AFL-CIO to drop Series record sef 27 years ago union business because of the "'f" *"" '"'*'* expulsion. bv the Chicago Cubs. .lewish holiday. Most of them Teamsters Again Loser Bob Buhl, the husky relaxed on the beach or around Kennedy said that after two or of their respective government on major questions of mutual concern." "They believe," it added, "that fice at his union's convention jthe conversation haa been help- despite corruption charges fired ful in this respect. The major by the committee and a blunt specificallyUoal as the moon "in a few St., a GAR student, suffered „.,.„„ .„. ,..^ .,„.,.„ „. ,„,,„^., j„ possible brain concussion, con-sharing in the commissions, « J .. • j tusion. and . possible '-ture how^he insuraiKe w^^^^^^ of the right wrist. He was ad- ^^.^^'^^^'^ ^^P"^'^re-^f^^^ wor,d. hailed the mitted for treatment. lanswered h""iiuiis w« ig^^^^^j^^ ^^ ^j^^ ^^^.^^^ satellite as a "triumph of the Soviet re- Jgime," but concentrated on . , , . .. . , ¦ , '^P"" feats yet to come in the con- George Ave., an-lniury to the lacked the essential information quering of outer spacp ear, and Howard Mason, 'r^^rl'n .J?^.!,. t'Zl^lJI: Trof. Kirill Stanyukovich, a tree weeks of hearings on Shef¬ ferman, to get Russia to follow a peace- to supply brokers the committee would in- '^"' Policy in the Middle East and of the face. .unoimts received, alleged violence bv"^*'"t''V *^"?)'* '"^ P""'''''''^ "' According to the hospital, only!not ffmplv. '^i'^' Teamster Union officials in lo^c^'iR ?" « "Tiajor ^'^r., "<•„„. (,.. ^gs Involved The car '""' Nashville a n d Chattanooga, also hoped to find o_^t who is the^""' , aZ t.r^^A Z.r «„ K„v ssia s cur-'reportedly turned over on tox 'rent zig-zag foreign piolicy. former paratrooper whp lasted swimming pools at the lavish only twn-tliirds of an inning, and resort hotels. the five hurlers who followed Hoffa, however, worked on ^, , , him to the mound for Milwau- battle tactics for a showdown T^,.vn..„ kre further flustered their fans with AFL-CIO leaders Oct. 24 hv issuing a total of 11 walks in New York City. Ths present for another unwanted record. It organization appeared ready to lied a mark set by the Yankees suspend the Teamsters at that last Oct. $ against Brookl\'n. time for defying its Hoffa-must- Bob Turley, who la.sted only go ultimatum, one and two-thirds innings as thie Can Apply Pressure . jj v j a Yankee starter. Issued four of! Sources high in the union ™ racket-ridden. Kennedy said the eight walks 'given to Mil-!said Hoffa would apply pressure '^e investigation would involvei ^, , waukee—for a two-team total of Ito other unions which depend'"«,J**'"*'^*.™ '*,V'Y'^'*'*=^**'"t_ OflTffllf^C 19 which broke bv three the rec-1 on Teamster support in an ef-<>" associations which conduct.^ *#»»» iff »#t» ord set in 1936 by the Yankees fort to prevent ouirter. ^"e multi-million dollar business,, and Giants. , If the 1,400,000-member truck Uglslation Proposals ' ^aksaw w So tt In no way could be'union is outlawed, Hoffa would testimony answered topics brought up were the Mid- Treated and discharged were Essential Data Missing die East, d^armament. the sit-jwalter Wllloughbv, 16. of 123 Miss Blatt said the ^fl'f^ Wii"3*,rt"c"^ ""'**''iGeorge Ave., an-lniury to the l^^cked the essential information States-Soviet contacts^ 'right — •-"* ""—"i m«„„ requested She asserted fhe Dulles hoped through the talks '^'1'"' ,,„_,. , '. ' GSA staff would he rf quested ,. ; 16. of ."58 Park Ave,, lacerations ,„ simnlv brokers' names and Soviet expert on jet propulsion and Chattanooga. =»'«? hoped to find out i Tenn. and neighboring states. ,""««' •rcnitecf of Rus After tiiat, he said, the com¬ mittee is expected to investigate the garbage-hauling business inj New York, reported for years to; Rioting Police fired ,tear gas shells at hundreds of cla«i«l a. a pitcher's battle,,unleash iU potent economic\^i;;"'taL te"!m(^y ?r^ ^^1"°^^^^^^^ with the Braves getting e.ghf^power to grab members from^ert3 on'sugS^^s^'rolfhTt^ ?^ hits—and larsen giving up five other unions, the sources said, rnrr^n ahiisM it ha« discovered \^"','-"^^° siraigni nipni or sireei of them as he failed to match: Its no secret in labor circles <=orrm abuses it has discove.^d_ v.o ence in that perfect pace^of a year ago.:t.hat Teamster truck drivers and „ Shefferman, a 70-year-old nist capital. Yet he moved along comfortably warehousemen are the kev to ^""=*f.°^,'.'* • 'al^r relations and without too much strain injmany strikes and organizing^""''"'^f'"' *;? ****"* -'Wbus'ness I - . ^ 6» "-"efirm.s, including many large de Hill Rd. idrives. Jtaci persons ht of sti this tense Commu- Students surged into the streets swinging sticks, «tones|;^;j,""ersewhe"r'e' foV and rubber truncheons Mo/fet Unable To Organize French Cabinet PARIS nn — Socialist formpr Premier Guy' Mollet last night gave up his attempt to form a new governmeni and pull France out of its 2.'!rd postwar politi¬ cal crisis. His decision to withdraw names and . , .,..•,, If thev do a"" member of the Inlerdepart- Blalt said '^*'"""' foTm^sion on Inter- she would ask the insuranreiPl«"'''j"^ Communications, was rnmmittpe to demand the addi ''i""";^ as ^^aying the launching iional information. ¦saving 228-inch, sphere into an orbit 184-pound ,"160 miles WASHINGTON OP—A Rus¬ sian space satellite hurtled across the United States six times today while scientists worked rapidly to revamp tracking system and plot its course. Two reports indicated the artificial moon already may be slowing down. A scientist of thc Carnegie Institution's observation station at Der¬ wood, Md., said the satellite was taking 101 minutes lo circle the earth, instead of the 95 minutes announced by IM'iscow, The RCA Communications Research Laboratory al River- head, N. Y,. calculated its speed Ihis aflernoon at 17.712 miles per hour, compared wilh the Soviet - estimated initial speed of 18,000 m,p,h. may not have been bluffing t J r, J . n /-• . . ln,¦^urance, forced President Rene Coty to ,, The report did not indicate for what years the premiums and commissions were paid. During the l9.5,')-57 biennium the agencv paid a t687,8.'?.'i in¬ surance hill for the two-year period. The report listed the total in- suranre carried and premiums paid on various tvpes of pohciesjas the launching of the firsti'^'avering nations in the cold wax .ind in numerous categories.iartificial satellite," he .said. ;could be tremendous if the The commissions ranged from! Hi' remarks were echoed in launching does mean Russia is 20 to ^0";,. i Paris by Russian-born space well ahead of the United States Project insurance, carried on'scientist Alexander Ananov, who in developing the tools of push- all the GSA's completed build-!said that "in the very near,button warfare. ings. totaled .$l.'i.T,020,181 Thefuture," missiles will be made Denies Countries In Race r.n tK ""'^ '"¦'"' l^" f'"u'>hen it recently claimed devel- fho'^ Vr.^ campaign to reach op,^,^^^ ^ an intercontinental tne moon. ballis ic missile —the "ultimats Confident of Future [weapon." It can be said with confi-'. State Department officials dence that in a few years flights f*^^<l Russia may have scored to the moon with instruments '** greatest propagantia victory, will become as mUch a realityiT*^* effect on the neutral and a posting his victory. ,„,...;„. . j ^ _. Kubek, the 20-year-old Mil-i Hoffa, refreshed by 12 hoursIP*'"'"!*"* ****'**'"°'"'"""*^"''" waukeean who left home to of sleep, said he would fight to!'"^ plants. ^ ^^ ^ ^^_ make good, started the Yankees;stay within the AFL-CIO and He testified earlier as the "get one militiaman was reported toLld crisis caused by the col- off in the first inning when with: refused comment on possible'' 'or .VO" wholesale fnend ofjhave been killed. lapse of the regime of Premier one away he pumped a homeii^prisal plans if the Teamstersl2."'^B<>'".? Teamster President^ .p^^ outbreaks hit the city in'Maurice Bourges-Maunourv. carried with several ;¦' .'"irompaniPS, required .'?;f100.27n in leaderi „,',,,„, Strong enough to organi/e a ma- They beat up several militia-ljority in the splintered National men who tried to restore order.|Assembly and end the five-day- (Continued on Page 4, Section 1) are ousted. Box Score of the Third Game Teamster President iDave Beck, admitting tlwt he,„.,„ „,,.,„, „„„ .,«„„m a . _„„ ,u-_ toi; nnn ^t ¦¦-.:/>» two waves. One around 8 used more than ,>B,i,t)t)0 of union funds to pay for personal goods ifor Beck. MILWAUKEE AB R Schoendlenst,2b Logan.ss Mathews.Sb Aaron.cf Covington,lf Adcock, lb Trowbridgcp d-Jonas McMahon.p f Pafko Hazle.rf Rice.o e-DeMerit Crandall,c Buhl,p Pizarro,p Conley,p b-SawatskI Johnson,p c-Torre,lb NEW YORK AB R Al 2lBauer,rf liKubek,lf g! Mantle,cf iBerra,c "!McDougald,ss 0 Simpson,lb a-Hbward,lb Collins, lb Lumpe,3b Coleman,2b Turley,p OiLarsen,p 0 ¦ Jl ToUls .¦?4 12 9 27 7 0 E—Buhl. RBI—Kubek 3, Mc- Dougald, Simpson, Lumpe 2, Mantle 2, Bauer 2, Schoendienst, Aaron 2. HR—Kubek 2, Mantle, O'Aaron. SB—McDougald. SF— 0 McDougald. DP — Schoendienst, O 3 4 1 7 3 0 6 1 2 0 0 0 Faubus Remains "Quiet in Ruekus 01 LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (W— 3 Gov. Orval E. Faubus was '.'sit ting tight and saying nothing" last night In the belief that time was on his side in the deadlocked dispute over with¬ drawal of federal troops from integrated Central High School. Qj Torre. LOB—New York 7, Mil Iwaukee 14. BB—Buhl 2, Turley '!4, Pizarro 2, Conley 1, Larsen 4, 0 Johnson I. Trowbridge ,•?, Mc- 1 Mahon 2. SO—Turley 2, Pizarro Totals 35 S 8 27 14 1. Larsen 4, Johnson 2, Trow- . , o • , J bridge 1, McMahon 2, HO— a-Walked for Simpson in 3rd|Byhl 2 in %; Turley 3 in 1%; b—Struck out for Conley injpizarro 3 in 1%; Conley 2 in 4th |l%; Johnson 0 iii 2; Trowbridge c—Grounded out for Johnson;2 in I; Larsen 5 in 7"/,; McMa- In 6th . Ihon 0 In 2. R&ER—Buhl 3-2, d—Grounded out for Trow-jTurley I-l, Pizarro 2-2, Conley bridge in 7th 2-2, Trowbridge 5-5, Larsen 2-2. e—Ran for Rice in 8th ' WP—Turley. HBP—Larsen fPaf- f—Hit by pitch for McMahon ko). PB—Rice. Winner—Larsen. In 9th SCORE BY INNINGS New York .102 200 500—12 MUwaukaa 010 020 OOfr- » Loser—Buhl. U—McKinley (A), plate: Donatelli (N), lb: Papa¬ rella (A), 2b: Conlan (N), 3b; Secorv (N). Chylak (A), foul ^nea. T—.3:18, A—iS.SOi. Valley Scenes WniiKin hurruing for hu» on Puhlir Squart hrfirinu enmenn* call, "Tfll 'fm to wait for me, lady," and turn¬ ing io sef drirer of th» bus leaning against a polt. Xine-year-old hoy sporting new foothall uniform and cautioning hia «andlot team¬ mates not to tackle him too hard "and get it dirty and mussed.". Citv ¦pharmacist arousing neighbor in wee hours of morning and sheeimhly ex- plaining "I hare n terrihle toothache do iiou hava a few ai^pirin tablets?" Liiztms man entering hit home through kitchen window an/i explaining to guspiciovs patrolman "I nliraiis do this when I'm lata a. tha dog won't kar*-" > * ¦i P.M.; Mollet blamed right-wing in and the second two hours later.(dependents refusal to agree to Police blamed "zootsuit hooli-ihis demands for special eco gans" rather than students for'nomic and financial powers to the violence. They said Hooli-ltry to bolster the shaky French gans, many of them drunk, in-leconomy The financial issue filtrated the student protest:caused Mollet's downfall in the groups, INational Assembly last June I premiums loseph Dan/.a, Har¬ risburg, was listed as broker of record. All-risk insurance on dams totalinn .$14,807,112 wis placed through Hutchinson Riviers Sr Co, Philadelphia, the brokers of records Premiums totaled <8n,fi<)2 The policies ran for three-vcHr neriods frnm ID.'i.'i-.'iS and Ifl.'if; .')9 also' fo numerous corn panies Dinzi also handled that can reach the moon. Ana- The White House refused to nov said it actually was harder'comment on the military aspects to hurl the satellite into its of the Soviet moon-launchmg. 18,000 m.p.h. trajectory in space: The U. S. program, Hagerty (Continued on Page 2, Sec. 1) (Continued on Page 2, Sec. I) Satellite Sidelights CAMBRIDGE, Mass W—Sci- Has MlllUry Advantage entisfs tracked the Russian earth satellite by radio today as it whirled in a path that carried HISI'S07 i' over the United .States. But Joined Twins Separated By 2V2-Hour Operation PHILADELPHIA (W—Siamese twin girls, joined at the base of the spine, were successfully separated yesterday in a rare operation performed at Children's Hospital here. Pamela and Patricia .Schartz, born nme days ago at Mercy Hospital in Rockville, L. I., were reporied in "good condition" following the major operation by 10 physicians. A •complication developed when the infants were separated. The heart of one stopped beating and surgeons had to open her chest and massage her heart back to normal. The heart beat was re-established in six minutes. The girls, whose parents live at 1.35 Carl Place, N. Y.. were placed in separate incubators following the 2'/2-hour operation. A hospital spokesman said they will remain in the incubator "until their conditions permit removal," possibly a week. in liabilitv in<:urnnce nn office equipment and lesser amounts on GSA owned automobiles, theft protection and others. Dan7.a is assistant manager nf an insurance firm headed by Sen. M, Harvey Taylor, veteran Republican leader and one of six GOP members of the authority. Democrats hold the other six member¬ ships. The report made one thing clear. It said Ihe GSA could not insure itself unless it se¬ cured the support of two-thirds of the thousands of bondholders fo change its formation rules. The possibility of tlie agency handling its own insurance had been one of the several ques¬ tions raised bv Miss Blatt. INSIDE THE INDEPENDENT FBI May Reveal Secret Report the experts said that for two or three weeks it could not be .seen by the naked eye or by telescope because its orbit is directly in line with the sun. As it raced through space, the satellite transmitted temperature data in a code known only to the Russians. PHILADELPHIA IIP—Dr. I. M. Levitt, director of Franklin Institute Fels Planetarium, said he can not see any mili¬ tary advanlage which would be gained bv Russia's earth salellitc. Levitt said the United .States could have put a satellitt In the sky more than a year ago If a 1954 program had bc«a carried out. He said he bellevaa th* U. S, could gain International prestige only by putting In tha sky a satellite IS feet In di¬ ameter, or one visible to tba naked eye. Platting Course WASHINGTON OP-Sclentistsi worked overtime here yesterday! in an effort to plot the exact course of the Russian space u. S. Prestige Suffers satellite. \ SEATTLF. Wash HP — Sen. Officials of project VanguardjHenry M. J,ick.son (D., Wash ), —the American satellite due to;said Russia's launching of tha be launched next year—hoped tO|World's first artificial satellita determine the spacemoon's orbit,i'ls a devastating blow to tha altitude, speed, and size. j United States' scientific, Indus- Walter H. McDonald, Van¬ guard information officer, said the data might enable scientists to tell also the weight of the satellite—a point which has been in question. Section Page | Amusement Three Around the Town.. Three Better English Three City Hall Naws ....Two Classified Six County News Two Crossword Puzzls...Six Drew Pearson Three Editorial Thtea Frank Tripp Thraa 10-11 7 8 8 5 9 4 « 6 7 House Doctor How Can 1 .¦' / ?....l»our Look and Learn ... .One Obituary One Politics Three Robert C. Ruark ...Three State Capitol .Two Stato News Two Sf>orts J"ive TV .Threa Womeo'i Section .. Four WASHINGTONJP-The gov. ernment is considering making „,._,„.,___,., _, ,, Section Page public all of the secret FBI in-i WASHINGTON (IP—Man . .Six is trial and feciinical prestige to the world." Jackson, who heads tha sub¬ committee of military applica¬ tions of atomic energy, said tha Soviet Union's main objective has been "to beat the UTMt«rf Stotes industrially, adentifically and technically," 4 formation about racial violence:Slill years away from spacejDom it Mean War? 2 at Little Rock, Ark,, which wasitravel despite Russia s success-! SAN FRANCISCO HP—Radio 11 available to the President before;f"l earth satellite, scientific station KCBS got an immediata 8 he decided to send troops there, circles said yesterday. ireaction Friday night when it 6 White House Press Secretary! These sources acknowledged interrupted a program to put on 7 James C. Hagerty revealed yes- that Russia has token a definite a live broadcast of the "beep" lOjterday the Justice Departmentistep toward eventual interplane- from the Russian satellita. An¬ il has "under consideration" a pro-ltary travel by human beings. Butnouncer Don Moslev said a 1-5 posal that it make public all of'they said tremendous obstacles woman called the station and 9-10 the information it supplied tcmust be overcome before man asked: "Does this mean war?" 1-9'the President before his decision, actually atepa ioto outer space, i (Continued oo Pa«e 2, tm. 1) C i: ; m i
Object Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 51 |
Issue | 50 |
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 | 1957-10-06 |
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 | 06 |
Year | 1957 |
Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 51 |
Issue | 50 |
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 | 1957-10-06 |
Date Digital | 2011-12-23 |
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 34099 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 |
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' s
TUIC IC U^IAZ IT UADDCiJCn MickeyManlle.Vanks:, (photoat left)
I nid Id nw W I I riiMr r ClllCI/"''~dive9 head first back to second ha.se on attempted pickoff as ball .sails toward Red Schoendienst, Braves second baseman, in first inning of yesterday's game in Milwaukee. In next photo. Umpire Art Paparella calls Mantle safe as ball went wide of base. Third photo shows how Mantle upsets Schoendienst in sliding back to second as Schoendienst
tries to lake wild pickoff throw from Pitcher Bob Buhl. Johnny Lo$;an, backRround, backs up play U Umpire Paparella watches. In forcRround is Braves' .loe Adcock (9) and Umpire Bill McKinley. In fourth photo .Mantle goes into third base safely as Schoendienst rolls on ground. Umpire Paparella follows hall. In foreground is Yogi Berra (S) Yanks catcher, who was on first base and advanced to second on Buhl's error. (Special United Press Telephoto Service.)
A Paper For The Home
SUNDAY INDEPENDENT
Cloudy, Cool
Highest Today 65 Monday—Cool, Showeri
51ST YEAR —NO. 50
Mi'mb^r Aiwlit Btir^na of Drrulntlna
WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1957
rMTF.n PRKSR ^ ire >if*vii Sprrlco
PRICE 20 CENTS
Larsen Tames Braves As Yankees Pound Out J2-3 Series Victory
Two Home Runs by Tony Kubek And ( ir uit Clout by Mantle Help Sadden Milwaukee Fans
MILWAUKEE (IP)—Don Perfect Game Larsen. a master in World Series heroics, walked out of the l)ull-pen shadow.s .ve,sterday afternoon to pitch seven and one-third relaxed relief innings as the New York
Yankees murdered the*.^
Milwaukee Braves, 12-3, in the third game of the
I ; 'N.slc. i
The Yankees, jumpiriR into a' 2to-l gamp lead before a bit-j tTly disappointed partisan ''rpves' crowd of 4.5.R04, turned their vaunted power loose on a parade of six Milwaukee pitchers in a nine-hit attack .sparked by Tony Kubok's two honip runs and an put-of-the park blast by (ore-leKged Mirkcy Mantle.
Hank .Aaron, the National I p veiie home-run champion, chipped in with one for the Braves. And* .lohnnv Lopan's l-'dnff sinjrlt' in the fifth slopped I.arsen after he had retired soven men in a row to
Racket Probers Plan to Call Employers Next
Want to Study Anti-Union Acts Of Associations
'Helpful' Talk Held by Dulles With Red Envoy
Clarify Positions On Major Subjects, Joint Release Says
WASHINGTON OP) —Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A, Gromyko announced jointly last night that they had held "helpful" discussions on the Middle East, disarmament, Eu¬ rope and Russo-American rela¬ tions.
That was the highlight of
U.S.Will Not Hurry Own Satellite Plans
Hoffa Plans Union Raids If Expelled
AFL-CIO Ouster Can Bring Pressure On Smaller Groups
MIAMI BEACH (IP)— union •lames R, Hoffa mapped a'who had retained Nathan W. Gromyko that Russian
camiiaign yester-^S^'^ffc'Ti^n . . . and the role,dumping policies in the Middle m Plains
be u.sed against ^}^^"^T^"
IS if the AFL-CIO ex-i*",;"- . ,,. . ..... ^ .,. .u . . ..
Kennedy outlined a tentative had telt that a meeting 'would
$400,000 Commissions Paid Siaie Insurance Brokers by Auihoriiy
Associate of M. Harvey Taylor Collected Big Share; Probe Is Planned by Secretary Blatt
WASHINGTON OP) —The Senate Labor Rack ets Comrnittee will investi¬ gate "improper or illegal efforts" of certain employers to keep unions out of their plants, counsel Rol)ert F. Kennedy aaid yesterday.
He said the committee'a next public hearings, beginning Oct. 21, will concern "certain anti-k activities of
„.. _ . ,. HARRISBURG OP)—Penn.sylvania insurance
Joint communique is"sued follow-!brokers have received between !i>300,000 and $100,000 ing a talk at Dulles' home that in conimi,s,sions from coverage written on General lasted nearly four hours, ;State Authority projects and equipment.
As he shook hands and laid goodbye to Dulles. Gromyko stopped to tell reporters the con¬ versation had been "useful" on a number of problems, including the tension-ridden Middle East, and the disarmament stalemate.
He said both sides had ex¬ plained and clarified their posi¬ tions on major topics.
To Seek Clarifications
Dulles, in advance of the ses-
Three City Youths Hurt
A. J, Caruso, GSA ex¬ ecutive director, turned over a sfiecial report to the authority's insurance com¬ mittee which showed the agency carried more than ,$168 million worth of insurance and paid nearlv $1 million. The report! iwas given to committee chair-i man Andrew M. Bradley, state^ property and supplies secretary. Three city students were in-J!,"*' Internal Affairs .Secretary
Blatt who had spe¬ lt last Aug.
Presideni Not Surprised: Diplomais, Scieniisis Express Keen Concern
(Related'stories on Page 2, Section 2)
WASHINGTON OP)—The Soviet conquest of outer space will not force the United States to speed it* efforts to launch an American-made moon, the Whit* House announced yesterday.
President Eisenhower took the historic Soviet triumph calmly and wa,^ not surprised. White House spokesman James C. Hagerty said. The President remained at his Gettysburg farm and played golf but kept in telephone ccm- tact with Washington aides.
Diplomatic and scientific offi¬ cials assessing the world-wide implications of the Russians' achievement admitted concern
They said the .«iz« of the Soviet satellite ahows Russia
Moscow Plans Moon Flight 'In Few Years'
No Soviet Boasting On Beating U. S. to 1 Major Space Punch '
MOSCOW (IP) — Soviet
employers sion, had been prepared to warn' -¦-' -— ^¦¦= — iOenevieve
.... , .. .,,.,,,^., »., i....... .,...,.,.... « r,,,„ ,,„v. .^.«...^u ..athan W. Gromyko that Russian arms jured in an automobile accident,,:,, -._,,„,„j
World NerVe"" m,s'"'jr'^4l! Gliding Campaign yesler-'Shefferman ... and the role,dumping policies m the Middle ;„ Plains, late last night. One 28. ^ requested
aHded to the 27 he set down^^.day to be used against Sh/Jf^T^" •"<» »>*• .tafrEast could lead to war jwas admitted and two others Secretary Blatt had a.sked, .....
bis no-hit. no-run eame against other unions if the AFL-CIO ex-; P,;"' _. „. ^ .... L The conimunique said the two!|,gatgj and discharged by Gen- for the report fo determine if jSCiontlsts who carried man
the Dodgers last vear. pels the Teamsters'for electing P""*°y °"'''"«° ,"^*"*3''J'*^"^'',.,'^''*"^^ '"**''"«...^"^'"ieral Hosoital the states building and borrow-iinto the age of space
Br.-.ves Strand 14 him president. jschedue which would keep the enable them to seek clanficationje"'""*?''^^^^^^ „f 2? rrnve '"« *««"':-V insurance practices flight yesterdav set their
But this was small consola- Hoffa, swept into office by committee busy most of the'of the intentions and positions! John Donnino. 16, of 22 Grove ^^,erg'^ound. She -~--^f.-~n..|-'"*^"'^ yesieiaa.v .set cneir
tion to the Braves' rooters—see- an overwhelming vote despitelf*"- " apparently left no time ing fhe first World Series game mounting corruption charges,!'^'' ""M extended retum engage- in Milwaukee's baseball hisforv. expected to get the rest of hisl"'^"'°''***"'/'^'" P'"**'°^."*-8'*^' They squirnred as the Braves;slate of vice presidents elected James R. Hoffa, swept into of- filled fhe bases four times and,before the Teamster convention pot only one run out of it andicloses. «
howled dismally as 14 stranded;Delegates Resting Milwaukee base-runners tied a Delegates took a day off from!j^;aming by the AFL-CIO to drop Series record sef 27 years ago union business because of the "'f" *"" '"'*'* expulsion. bv the Chicago Cubs. .lewish holiday. Most of them Teamsters Again
Loser Bob Buhl, the husky relaxed on the beach or around Kennedy said that after two or
of their respective government
on major questions of mutual
concern."
"They believe," it added, "that
fice at his union's convention jthe conversation haa been help-
despite corruption charges fired ful in this respect. The major
by the committee and a blunt
specificallyUoal as the moon "in a few
St., a GAR student, suffered „.,.„„ .„. ,..^ .,„.,.„ „. ,„,,„^., j„
possible brain concussion, con-sharing in the commissions, « J .. • j
tusion. and . possible '-ture how^he insuraiKe w^^^^^^
of the right wrist. He was ad- ^^.^^'^^^'^ ^^P"^'^re-^f^^^ wor,d. hailed the
mitted for treatment. lanswered h""iiuiis w« ig^^^^^j^^ ^^ ^j^^ ^^^.^^^ satellite
as a "triumph of the Soviet re- Jgime," but concentrated on . , , . .. . , ¦ , '^P"" feats yet to come in the con-
George Ave., an-lniury to the lacked the essential information quering of outer spacp
ear, and Howard Mason, 'r^^rl'n .J?^.!,. t'Zl^lJI: Trof. Kirill Stanyukovich, a
tree weeks of hearings on Shef¬ ferman,
to get Russia to follow a peace-
to supply brokers the committee would in- '^"' Policy in the Middle East and of the face. .unoimts received,
alleged violence bv"^*'"t''V *^"?)'* '"^ P""'''''''^ "' According to the hospital, only!not ffmplv. '^i'^' Teamster Union officials in lo^c^'iR ?" « "Tiajor ^'^r., "<•„„. (,.. ^gs Involved The car '""' Nashville a n d Chattanooga, also hoped to find o_^t who is the^""' , aZ t.r^^A Z.r «„ K„v
ssia s cur-'reportedly turned over on tox
'rent zig-zag foreign piolicy.
former paratrooper whp lasted swimming pools at the lavish
only twn-tliirds of an inning, and resort hotels.
the five hurlers who followed Hoffa, however, worked on ^, , ,
him to the mound for Milwau- battle tactics for a showdown T^,.vn..„
kre further flustered their fans with AFL-CIO leaders Oct. 24
hv issuing a total of 11 walks in New York City. Ths present
for another unwanted record. It organization appeared ready to
lied a mark set by the Yankees suspend the Teamsters at that
last Oct. $ against Brookl\'n. time for defying its Hoffa-must-
Bob Turley, who la.sted only go ultimatum, one and two-thirds innings as thie Can Apply Pressure . jj v j a
Yankee starter. Issued four of! Sources high in the union ™ racket-ridden. Kennedy said the eight walks 'given to Mil-!said Hoffa would apply pressure '^e investigation would involvei ^, ,
waukee—for a two-team total of Ito other unions which depend'"«,J**'"*'^*.™ '*,V'Y'^'*'*=^**'"t_ OflTffllf^C 19 which broke bv three the rec-1 on Teamster support in an ef-<>" associations which conduct.^ *#»»» iff »#t» ord set in 1936 by the Yankees fort to prevent ouirter. ^"e multi-million dollar business,,
and Giants. , If the 1,400,000-member truck Uglslation Proposals ' ^aksaw w
So tt In no way could be'union is outlawed, Hoffa would
testimony
answered topics brought up were the Mid- Treated and discharged were Essential Data Missing die East, d^armament. the sit-jwalter Wllloughbv, 16. of 123 Miss Blatt said the ^fl'f^ Wii"3*,rt"c"^ ""'**''iGeorge Ave., an-lniury to the l^^cked the essential information States-Soviet contacts^ 'right — •-"* ""—"i m«„„ requested She asserted fhe
Dulles hoped through the talks '^'1'"'
,,„_,. , '. ' GSA staff would he rf quested ,. ;
16. of ."58 Park Ave,, lacerations ,„ simnlv brokers' names and Soviet expert on jet propulsion
and Chattanooga. =»'«? hoped to find out i Tenn. and neighboring states. ,""««' •rcnitecf of Rus
After tiiat, he said, the com¬ mittee is expected to investigate the garbage-hauling business inj New York, reported for years to;
Rioting
Police fired ,tear gas shells at hundreds of
cla«i«l a. a pitcher's battle,,unleash iU potent economic\^i;;"'taL te"!m(^y ?r^ ^^1"°^^^^^^^ with the Braves getting e.ghf^power to grab members from^ert3 on'sugS^^s^'rolfhTt^ ?^
hits—and larsen giving up five other unions, the sources said, rnrr^n ahiisM it ha« discovered \^"','-"^^° siraigni nipni or sireei of them as he failed to match: Its no secret in labor circles <=orrm abuses it has discove.^d_ v.o ence in that perfect pace^of a year ago.:t.hat Teamster truck drivers and „ Shefferman, a 70-year-old nist capital. Yet he moved along comfortably warehousemen are the kev to ^""=*f.°^,'.'* • 'al^r relations and without too much strain injmany strikes and organizing^""''"'^f'"' *;? ****"* -'Wbus'ness I - . ^ 6» "-"efirm.s, including many large de
Hill Rd.
idrives.
Jtaci
persons ht of sti this tense Commu-
Students surged into the
streets swinging sticks, «tones|;^;j,""ersewhe"r'e' foV and rubber truncheons
Mo/fet Unable To Organize French Cabinet
PARIS nn — Socialist formpr Premier Guy' Mollet last night gave up his attempt to form a new governmeni and pull France out of its 2.'!rd postwar politi¬ cal crisis.
His decision to withdraw
names and . , .,..•,,
If thev do a"" member of the Inlerdepart- Blalt said '^*'"""' foTm^sion on Inter- she would ask the insuranreiPl«"'''j"^ Communications, was rnmmittpe to demand the addi ''i""";^ as ^^aying the launching iional information.
¦saving 228-inch, sphere into an orbit
184-pound ,"160 miles
WASHINGTON OP—A Rus¬ sian space satellite hurtled across the United States six times today while scientists worked rapidly to revamp tracking system and plot its course.
Two reports indicated the artificial moon already may be slowing down. A scientist of thc Carnegie Institution's observation station at Der¬ wood, Md., said the satellite was taking 101 minutes lo circle the earth, instead of the 95 minutes announced by IM'iscow,
The RCA Communications Research Laboratory al River- head, N. Y,. calculated its speed Ihis aflernoon at 17.712 miles per hour, compared wilh the Soviet - estimated initial speed of 18,000 m,p,h.
may not have been bluffing
t J r, J . n /-• . . ln,¦^urance,
forced President Rene Coty to ,,
The report did not indicate for what years the premiums and commissions were paid. During the l9.5,')-57 biennium the agencv paid a t687,8.'?.'i in¬ surance hill for the two-year period.
The report listed the total in- suranre carried and premiums
paid on various tvpes of pohciesjas the launching of the firsti'^'avering nations in the cold wax .ind in numerous categories.iartificial satellite," he .said. ;could be tremendous if the
The commissions ranged from! Hi' remarks were echoed in launching does mean Russia is 20 to ^0";,. i Paris by Russian-born space well ahead of the United States
Project insurance, carried on'scientist Alexander Ananov, who in developing the tools of push- all the GSA's completed build-!said that "in the very near,button warfare. ings. totaled .$l.'i.T,020,181 Thefuture," missiles will be made Denies Countries In Race
r.n tK ""'^ '"¦'"' l^" f'"u'>hen it recently claimed devel- fho'^ Vr.^ campaign to reach op,^,^^^ ^ an intercontinental tne moon. ballis ic missile —the "ultimats
Confident of Future [weapon."
It can be said with confi-'. State Department officials dence that in a few years flights f*^^ |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19571006_001.tif |
Month | 10 |
Day | 06 |
Year | 1957 |
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