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Kingston 35 Larksville 20 Army Nanticoke 7 Plymouth 13 Utah * • 39 i Navy 33 ! Duke 6 I Michigan Sta 34 Penn 6 Notre Dame 6 Yale * 33 I West Virginia 7 (For Deiails SeeV 20 i Pittsburgh 6 \ Section 3 ) A Paper For The Home SUNDAY INDEPENDENT Cloudy, Cold Highest today 38 Monday—Cold, flurriet 52ND YEAR —NO. 3 Member Andit Burena of Clrralatlns WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1957 rMiTtrt PRESS wire Nawa Serrlca PRICE 20 CENTS 3 Luzerne County Men Escape Injury in Wreck Editorial Today On Key Problems In Our Communify Added reason for support of those community-minded peo¬ ple who have been working all these years to bring in new industries. . . . And a warning fo those in control of the purse strings in the county and all the local governments... , Both these things will be found in the lead editorial in the Sundav Independent today which gives a glimpse of the possible future of the (ilen ,Mden and Its effect nn mil¬ lions of dollars in local t.Txes as well as thousands of local jobs. It should be of special in terest to those m conlrol of the spending of public funds in I.uzerne tounty and it is a warning against loading up on heavy debts which fhe private property owners will have to meet in the future. No Trace Found Of Plane Missing With 44 Aboard -hS> U. S. Will Move Slowly In Disclosing >4-Secrets Search Planes, Ships Unable To Find Clues President Plans To Ask Congress To Raise WA.SIIINGTON flPX-The administration will con- ( h a i r m a n Le\vi.s L.«-—'. .Siraii.xs of thp Atomic Kn rhree Luzerne County crewmen escaped injury when 14 cars uf a 92-car Delaware & Hudson Railroad train jumped thc tracks yesterday morning at Cliff St., Scranton. near the Scranton-Spring Brook Water Service Co. gas plant. The train was made up in Wilkes-Barre and was proceeding to Oneonta, N. V. The five members of Ihe crew, who were riding the Diesel locomotive which did not leave the tracks, were William Dimmock of Dallas, engineer; C, E. Rosser of Kings¬ ton, brakeman: Fred Colvin of Kingston, trainman: George Litlle of Scranton, conductor, and George Anderson of IVloosic, flagman. . The helter-skelter of smashed tank, freight and hopper cars blocked the O&H main line between Wilkes-Barre and Oneonta, N. V, Engineer Dimmock told officials he was operating Ihe Wilkes-Barre to Oneonta train at 28 m.p.h. at the time of Ihe derailment. There is a 35 m.p.h. limit on this section of the main line. There was little damage other than lo railroad properly. Some of Ihe cars ended up only a few feet from gasoline pumps and over a 20.000-gallon underground gasoline stor¬ age tank. (Photo by Grescovic) ovzy Con^n^'\ss'\nr^ di.'«'losH the administration delay in a letter lo a member of the .loinl ( ongrrssional Atomic Knergv Committee. The congressman had asked jiict what President I isenhower had in mind along this line Pane ^"' ^''''"'' '""'* I yVJ j .Strauss said he will nof make / recommendations to President Kisenhower until after talks later this month with Sir Edwin Plow- den. British atomic energy chief. In London, official sources said Britain will .send a team of experts to the United States soon to help organize a joint scientific staff Strauss said he was approach¬ ing the problem on the philos¬ ophy "Ihat It does not make any sense lo withhold from our increa.ses costing allies information which, based a billion dollars a lions TOX OT) E i s p n- .vpstorday to recom- Fate of Dog In Satellite Is Red Secret Not Mentioned For Second Day; Hints at Death va,sL area.s of tlie Pacific early today in an increa.s- ingly hopeless .search for a Pan American Stratocruiser named "Romance of the Skies " that disappeared suddenly Fndav night on a flight from San Fran¬ cisco to Honolulu. The plane, a double-decked luxury craft carrying 44 per¬ son: , made a routitie radio check it the halfway "point of no re¬ turn" Friday afternoon and has not been heard from sinie. Dozens of planes from th« Navy, Coast Guard and com¬ mercial air lines criss-crossed ¦ 100,000 square mile are in per- searching weather all day ;ect U. S. Bouncing Signals Off Surface of Moon As Radio Relay Station WASHINGTON' (lP)_The United State.s ha.s been bombarding: tho moon for more than a decade—with packets of energ'.v. No one ha.s .said yot that this g-ives thc United States territorial rijrhts lo thc;^ moon such a.s might be claimed by the fir.st nation to hit it with a rocket. "But we do claim." a Naval research scientist told the United Press, "that the moon is a fairly high class radio relay station of both military and commercial value" And. he added, moon research! also bas established the "perfect feasibility" of sending radio "commands" to rocket craft in lunar space and of receiving ra¬ dio reports from them. First in 1946 Britain to Send Top A-Experts Joint Science Staff Will Be Organized LONDON (U')— Britain will send a hand-picked team of experts to the law Orders Trim For Sideburn Pair HARTFORD, Conn. dPi—the law ordered a trimming for Richard Parent, 19, and John McGary, 24, when they ap¬ peared in police court ye.ster¬ day to pay breach of peace fines of $.')0 each. Judge Harry G. Kaminski seni the long-sidebumed pair to a barber saying, "that type of haircut makes you young fellows think you've got mus¬ cles to flex." Cold Snap Hits Most of Nation Five Inches of Snow in Great Lakes Area About Face Will Cost U. About 2 Bill : WASHING —P resident •hower was said jto be preparing ; mend pay more than year for military personnel and alVeadv" "known to'ou'r'^otiential^'""^ ^^^e solved the ulti-i '^^^ ^"'' ^""^^l Guard offi- federal Civjl Service employees, ep^^^ies •• P"'^"''^' mate problem of bringing the '^'*''' ^'''^ ^'^''^ exploring the i A reliable soune said the The President took the .same''"« »'^<->' '« «^arth^ |^nf™w'',n"Jh' l^r ^iw i'^n jpay raises are not likely to be- posilion Thur.sday nighl in '"" ^^"^ ^^e second dav in > mwl"P'"ded in the air. Ihey said upon a.Jequate intelligence. jlong, seeking clues to the fate ;of the Stratocrui.ser and its ,16 MOSCOW (IP) — More ''-'-''¦''Angers and eight crew mem- than 1,000 miles of space,%': the same time at least u and scientific secrecy lastjsuiface vessels and two Navy night .shrouded the fate ofl*"''"iarines were pioughin the dog in the Sputnik, The""'°",K^ ^^^ »¦¦«« f*"" f^ces quesion was whether Soviet ^•'^'''^aKe or survivors Navy and " l^ same icome a casualty of the "hudgetifirsl of his "chins up" speechel L'l*' ""'*^l^l..^?'''*^/?5""'^."".'?"''^'^ii^^ 1^^^ ,°L IV^IZ .?,"l!.^'-„ V}? 1 increases in missile and rocket> spending. Abnut-Face By UNITED PRESS The coldest weather of the Fall season slammed across the northern two- thirds of the nation yes¬ terday, whipping up frequent snow squalls across a large por¬ tion of the Great Ukes region. Strong winds buffeted Plains Township man was'northeast, and mercury levels Plains Man Hit by Car .squeezed" next year, despiteion missiles and satellites. c" ^''*., \';^^'^"" "^'' *^=''f''""i LresI*^l»n»U on"fhrj^™l-''„ pressure for multi-billion dollar;Br„-d Agreement Sputnik II failed to mention the resssignal.s on the emergency ! :_ _;..:i- --J .„_i...;'»f"'"" rtRreemeni 40-pound female Arctic sledge ''*''"*"*^y added to tbe fear He and British Prime Minister dog named Laika. !-hat the plane might have Harold Macmiiian agreed herei In London, the British Broad- ^''ow" "P last month on the broad outlines;casting Corp. said its listening Explore AH Theories The administration's decision'of a plan for swapping more posts could not hear the satel- "There are many theories tn reprresents an about-face from nuclear and other military- lite's signals when il pa-sed ^ explored in the sudden and the stand il took during this scientific information among the over Britain. Technicians re- niystenous disappearance of a vear'.s congressional session. The NATO allies. ifused to speculate whether ils ^^fi^ plane," Capt. Sam Read. President vetoed two bills passed Regardless of how far the pro- batteries had run down or -hief press information officer in thc closing hours of the \951 poseeh^tefttslBt+ort goes in relax-;whether the dog may have been i' Pearl Harbor »aid. "However session to raise the pay of postal mg .s-eciirily on atomic informa-ejected along with the trans- 'he explosion theory is receiv- employoees and rrther civil Hon, it is headed for a thorough mitter. in.n priority." sen.'ants. going-over in the House-Senate Lacking official guidance. Cmdr. William E Chapline, Thc government al.so turned.Atomic Energy Committee. Sev- newsmen in Moscow speculated chief of the Coa.st Guard Search down early this year the "Cor-ieral of its "members alreadyiLaika died sometime Thursday and Rescue Section, said that diner Report" plan for a majorlhave put up "go slow" flags. night in her air-conditioned dog-even with a sudden fire or corn- overhaul of military pay scales The present law permits ex-jhouse travelling five miles a'P'ete loss of power the crew Now it is ready to go along with (change of nuclear information j second in space. should be able to .send some most features of this plan and,only where weapons are notj The last report on the dog sort of emergency signals. At recommend it to Congress, even j involved and, even then, under, came Thursday with a Soviet a plane's normal descent of ,'ino though it will initially add sev-1specified safeguards, tfie'eral hunrded million dollars tO| — the defen.se budget A Plains Township man was;nortneasr, ana mercury leveis, .pi,^ ^^^ expenditures, plus/^L-. ^1-..- T^J*... injured in a two car collision at ^'PPf'' " f""^"'"" '"' ^^^ '°"|^!f •^P"'"''<,;"^"7f, """'^^ f, ""^LnGCKUD I OOflV North River and Courtright SIS, «'^ Texas and Tennessee, with o two b, lion d^^ I WUUJ tpmnpratiirp^ in tliP tPPns acrosS '-•'^i^. "OUIfl aun tip tf> an r Plains, lasl nighl at 8. The vic [IT^'TJJ 111 LlZLtl^ l'^.^^ fiscal vear hudget tim, William Morowski, 6,5, of the northern plains, northern 9 Burke St., was admitted to General Hospital for observa- Valley. Rockies and upper with to two billion dollars in defense' over over 2 billion dollars. Mississippi For President 5 Firms Will Push '¦'(jlfif Nuclear Power Plant dence that Russia has dertaken such research. yet un- W A S II 1 N (; T 0 N UP),of space travel -P resident F> i s e n-lthe problem of Ihower will enter Walter!?"'! "'her space phenomena ' » '. ,,.j: , /¦-. living things. Even dead post The United States in 1046 be- United States .shortly to tion, township police reported. ' Freezing temperatures were came the first nation to bounce help organize a joint scientific Morowski was a passenger in|expected by early today a ._. „^.^,„„r »-nwBr r-innr s .u radio pulses off the moon. The:genera) staff, official sources j car operated by Anthony'south as the northern oulf'^"'^'®"'^ f^O^er nam , . ^j„ ^^^^^, ^yj^^p,,,and other space phenomena on British. Canadians and Australi- said ye-sterday. iMinots. ;i2 .lones .St., Hudson, states, with sub-zero readings, WALTHAM. Mass. "P —Kivejop-j A.-mv Medical Cen-u''!."^ things. Even dead, the ans have done ll since. Moon- The move is an outgrowth of which police said was rammed likely in northern Minnesota.,private industrial firms and , J "/'^'"-f ¦'"'^^' y".''<>dy would be useful m radio experts_ here have no evi- the recent Washington talks be- n the inter.seciion by an autolMeanwhile, a warming trendlutilities have formed an asso- '''' toria,\ tot a -1-houi jmortem exammations. tween President Eisenhower and driven by Thomas Bozek, War-iwas expected to develop in theiclation fo design a new-type,""ead to toe medical checkup. Scientists m Moscow nave I Prime Minister Harold Macmil-den PI., Harvey's Lake. Both western prairies. 'nuclear power plant. Uhe White House said yesterday.: hinted efforts might be mady- to The most recent and presum- lan which included discussion!vehicles were towed away. iNine Death* Recorded I The new group, American; The President, who is 67, is bnng the dog down. But inis ably mo.st productive work on of the need for closer Anglo-: R^^pk nostprt tl non bail he a! i V a^^iu. ..or.lNuclear Power Associates, said scheduled to enter the hospitaPnever was stated officially. the U. S. "moon circuit" is a! American .scientific cooperafion fore Justice of the Peace C^arl^s ^»h Tv wl,1horImce fhe ^he radically new high tempera- lato todav and return to the military secret. Also secret is in the face of Soviet advances. Spiamf bcndineth^^^^ high performance plant White House tomorrow after- the moons military significance Chief task of the expertslf'm^of Z man"s inluries ''""^'^^^^ f^^ he a necessarv fore-runner noon as a radio relay .station. But it Britain will send to Washington'"!^,'' "^^ '"f ^ '"'""!'¦ . vlT^ *"-?." ""f Midwest late Fri- ^^ ^,^„^^,,-,^\y competitive nu- It will be his lirst complet,. can safeiv he as.sumed that: will be to plan closer alignment , ^1? accident was investigated day. ITie storm system also ^j^^^ .^^ (physical checkup sin(e Oct. 28. Hard to Jam of scientific re.search and de- "^^ '^,''""'"'^?," ^"'^y Benjanski spawned killer tornadoes tha J^^^ comprises Rav-|l!>.')6. when the examining phy- Broadcasls via the moon would velopment •,"^^^.7^ ^^'''" °^ ^""^ li'if. o«rr^?i'"'^?»- '"^^^^^^^^ Manufacturing Co., ofi^icians reported that he gave be much harder for an encmv Sir Frederick Brundrelt, chief, "'PP"'":^ Tass News Agencv announce- teet per minute from its 10,000 ment that .scientists were re- foot 'evel, it would have had 20 ceiving radioed data onlv on its minutes to fire an SOS, he said, "main" physical functions. This He added that loss of power was taken' to mean its health would allow at least three min- was falling "tes to give some warning and The return of the dog to earth hat once on the water, the crew —a feat similar to the launching fould have used hand-cranked of the satellite itself in its Oibson Girl transmitters implications —would give vital rhe entire Pacific area has data to scientists on the effectsheen alerted to listen fnr hand- cosmic rays, -ranked .SOS signals, buf »o far Wrightlessnes.s,none have been heard, he taid. Reports Skirmish DA.MASCUS HP—.Syrian and Turkish border forces skir¬ mished in a .30-minute firefight yesterday and a Turkish soldi<>r was arrested on .Syrian soil, the ;^overnmenl said last night. , . , , . . The official statement also A cold, cloudy day with snow charged that two unidentified jet irries has been forecast by the ,3^^, f,^^ ^^^^ jjvrian towns Weather Bureau at Avoca Air- ^.j^.^ ,„ t^c Mediterranean ves- 26 to 38 Range Due Here Today . to economically competitive nu- fu".? clear power. . , . that T^J ' find .lames Gavin of the Waltham: Burns & Roe. Inc., "every appearance of being in to jam than ordinarv high fre-scientific adviser to the Defense " ' ' siaies. , ..New 'York architect-engineers; excellent health " quency radio communications. Ministry, was expected to headir_,,i_|i, c;__,_l- c„J| Up to five inches of snow felliciark Bros. Co, divi.sion of His personal physician, ^la)^ port for today. Little change can ::r^:''VC ;!;¦;;;"i^^^ It would take a vast amount of the British group. i^pUTniK dignOIS roil on various areas of the lakes re- Dresser Operations, Inc.. Olean. Cen. Howard Mc(. Snyder, old ^^ expected tomorrow. o » ni.mhpr m/de ^^en tv .t power and much larger equip-Mutual Benefit SYRACUSE, N. Y. (IP—Dean Rio" Duluth, and International n. Y,. compresser and blow^er the United Press he saw no -,,,^. n,„curv dropp.d to 30: P V?ohTof th^ Svr aTTuricish ment to jam the moon circuit, jhe sources said the United Morgan, a General Eleciric engi- Fa'Is. M'nn, and Superior and manufacturers: Griscom-Russell reason whv the thorough ex- ,^ j^^^ ^, ^, ^^ midnight.l.l'J!.™, ,"! '"^ ^^"a" ""^'S" a radio expert .said. sjtes, -n"tur'n wTif s nd a^'com' "eer, said yesterday Sputnik 2 ^s^land^ Wiv. reported five-inch co. ^»p^'f'^Zr:f (^'^J^l^ resident" in gl'od "h"aUh"" ''' l*)" '"^ "^-^ "'iW' ''¦ ¦""''' ¦'' The government said Turkish Even if nuclear war smashed mittee of experts to London un-^toPPfd trjinsmitting us radio snow covers. f'''°?^i'''"T'^r^fh''!P,;„^„n ,T^ In^^ of this confidence '''"^^ "^ '"' )"" ^4 hours previ- horder forces started the battle up e.xisting microwave relay sta-der the projected plan to com- s'pnals at /:n6 P. M. E.S.T. Fn- The colder air, mcanwlnle. dis- lon, Ohio, ^^a exchange e_qu,p- Indicalive of ^^^^^^^^ l, ^_ll _.^^^^^, ^^^^^^ ,_ ^^^ ^^^ ^ Ir^col^^'IaT'^bel'^erL^n'^^^^rm^^tn^eyil^^^ Po^-J-^^^";.^^"'^-'"^--'^ -?':X'd^''^rn^^^^^^^^ '^^ t_oday,. accordin., ,0 the.,,,,/,, ,f ,„ .f,, ,„, ,., two points on earth via the The scientific general .staff is,'*^^ signals failed and south Atlantic stales Nyack. N. Y. moon. It makes no difference expected to thrash oul detailed' ~ of have been checkup. how far apart the eartji stations plans on the scope of pooled re- K|avA# Trnnz-A Oare^rA are. search in various nuclear and '^ev* irnnte wetoro In any case, it is now possi- missile fields, bie to leap-frog the vast Com- Since World War 2, U. S. law munist areas of the world has prevented any great inter- where the free nations have no t'hange of atomic secrets. British relay stations. Turnpike Lacking Wilkes-Barre Signs On Upper End, Too Apparently they don't want anybody to know about Wllkes-Barre when they .'start from the northern end of the Northeastern Turnpike Exten¬ sion, either. This last bit, between Clark's Summit and Moosic was opened last week. There isn't a single Wilkes- Barre sign between Clark's Summit and the Wilkes-Barre Interchange. Ever since the rest of the turnpike was opened long since there has not bee'n a sign to show motorists that Wilkes-Barrc lies ahead as they drive from Philadelphia up. until they are practically here. Scores of motorists getting lost have been reported but the Turnpike Commission ap¬ parently has been too busy with scandals and such to do anything about it and American scientists have I been working independently. I Army Entered Missile Field \During War HUNTSVILLE. Ala. HP—Maj. Gen. H. N. Toftoy. commanding Igeneral of the Army's Redstone Arsenal, said yesterday the Army decided to enter the: guided missile field before thei end of World War 2. Toftoy, one of the key fig-| ures in the Army's "new look,": is the man responsible for "Op-1 eration Paper Clip," the round-j up of German scientists and en-; gineers who fashioned the ter¬ rifying V2 rocket and their even-i tual settling-down in the United States to launch this nation in^ the missile and rocket field Thc team work of the Ger¬ mans and U. S. Army men paid off when Defense Secretary; Neil H. McElroy directed the Army to make the necessary preparations to launch an earth i satellite. It climaxed an uphill: fight for the Army to get intoj the 'moon' field. 5-Day 'Heavenly' Hypnotic Sleep Helps Nervous Woman Add Weight bureau. Record low for Nov. 10 Akaqa near the citv of Kameshi. was in 1956 when the tempera- xhe communique identified th« ture dropped to HI de "rees. alleged Turkish attackers as a A three-inch snowfall, first of patrol but did not give its size, the season, blanketed Erie Coun- Syrian civilian volunteer ty ye.sterday and the forecast j^uards returned the fire for half indicated the area mav have g^ hour, the g-)vemment said, more than 12 inches along the ^ ^as not immediately clear lake today. The snow blanket whether there were any casual- spread as far south as Meadville, (j^. It was a year ago this month ' that most sectirms of North¬ eastern Pennsylvania were vir¬ tually snowbound with a near three-foot fall a; Valley Scenes CHICAGO OPi —A young housewife awakened yesterday from a "heavenly " hypnotic trance and refu.sed to believe thai she had been asleep for five days. Hypnotist Edwin L. Baron brought Mrs. Nora Hughes. 27, oul of the hypnotic sleep into which he placed her to help her gain weight and lose nerv¬ ousness. "When are we going to •tart?" she groggily asked him. She expressed disbelief when Baron told her it was .Satur¬ day and she had been dozing peacefully 20 to 22 hours a day since Monday. "You can say it but I won't believe it. " she told him as she lay on her bed in his of¬ fice before a crowd of report¬ ers. She accepted the fact that she had been out-of-touch with the world for nearly a week after several of Baron's stu¬ dents and coworker* con¬ firmed what the hypnotist told her. Baron brought Mrs, Hughes out of the trance slowly as her husband, Virgil, looked on anxiouslv. The hypnotist told her softly that he was going to count three and she would awaken. He counted and she stirred, looked up at him and asked when he planned to begin the experiment to which she iiad agreed. She lay sleepily on the bed for more than five minutes, gradually looking more awake while Baron and othprs per¬ suaded her she had had a long, restful sleep. rhen she looked at her hand and noticed that a rash which had been bothering her had almosi disappeared. "You've done something to my hand." she accused Baron. She said she felt "mighty strange." "I feel as though I just went to sleep," she said. INSIDE THE INDEPENDENT Amusemcni.... .Around the Town... Three City Hall News .Three Classified Seven County News Three Crossword Puzzle.. .Seven Drew Pearson .Three Editorial Three Frank Tripp Three House Doctor Seven Section Page Section Page .hour 10-11: How Can r.'? ? Six 7 7;Qbituary One 8 10; Politics Three « 1-41 Robert C. Ruark.... Three 7 111.State Capital Five 4 1 State News '..Five .5 6 Sports Three 1 -5 6iTV Four 11 7fTV Programs Five 2 4 Women's Section... four 1-81 Asked if .she usually ate breakfast when she got up. she said she did but didn't "feel like ealmg now," "I feel like I've just eaten, " she said Baron and other members of the Hypnotism Institute of Chicago, which he heads, have fed Mrs. Hughes regularly dur¬ ing her trance. Dr Daniel Thomas of Gary, Ind. who examined the woman after she awakened, said she had gained four pounds—from 102 to 106 pounds. He said her pulse and res¬ piration were normal Hughes, who came to Chi¬ cago to take his wife bark to fheir home and three children m East Gary. Ind., said he was happv to have her awake again If she feels better, it will be worth it," he aaid. Mrs. Hughes, Friday held the first news conference ever conducted under hypnosis and •told newsmen U "feels like heaven." Sonaff Ready To Shed Mate for Roberto ROME IIP—Roberto Rossellini; jand Mrs Sonali Das Gupta yes-i jterday made plans to return toi India where she will file suit forj divorce so she can marry the Italian movie producer, it was reported. ; Friends of .Mrs Das Gupta's father said in Calcutta that she planned to return from Pans to try to gain her freedom from her film producer husband, Hari S. Das Gupta Ihey said she had gone to Pans to "engineer" a legal sepa¬ ration betweei. Ros.sellini and actress Ingrid Bergman and that this had been accomplished ! Rossellini has applied for a new visa to return to India and reports from New Delhi said the government would grant it. Man tr)iing I" •¦oke leav»$ tfroiii Iniiii of Went S)H' fu- neral hmitf Pridny nftervntm nt 4.}3 iiTthr fare of • t$ MPH wind. Heights mart reiurnniff Ut livingroom front, kitrhen anit telling wife "thal'g good hut- termilk iiou bought" and then sunitnoiiing phmtirinn when mate adri^ed Ihc onl'/ thing to drink in the refrigerator was liquid starch. yinn who can't be much af a uludrnt of government over- hi tiring discuenion on eity hudget in Heights taproom and remarking "thai woman council m a n (Mrs. Ethel Price) mn»t harr ftartfd that budget stuff — my wife hat one too!" Young hoft nnking hit way to projertion booth >n eity theater nnd asking o/ierntor "how ahout giving me th* film when iiou'rr through with them, my uneli- fun • moting ptetur» iHaektn*t" 4i- }
Object Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 52 |
Issue | 3 |
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 | 1957-11-10 |
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 | 11 |
Day | 10 |
Year | 1957 |
Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 52 |
Issue | 3 |
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 | 1957-11-10 |
Date Digital | 2011-12-27 |
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 32517 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 | Kingston 35 Larksville 20 Army Nanticoke 7 Plymouth 13 Utah * • 39 i Navy 33 ! Duke 6 I Michigan Sta 34 Penn 6 Notre Dame 6 Yale * 33 I West Virginia 7 (For Deiails SeeV 20 i Pittsburgh 6 \ Section 3 ) A Paper For The Home SUNDAY INDEPENDENT Cloudy, Cold Highest today 38 Monday—Cold, flurriet 52ND YEAR —NO. 3 Member Andit Burena of Clrralatlns WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1957 rMiTtrt PRESS wire Nawa Serrlca PRICE 20 CENTS 3 Luzerne County Men Escape Injury in Wreck Editorial Today On Key Problems In Our Communify Added reason for support of those community-minded peo¬ ple who have been working all these years to bring in new industries. . . . And a warning fo those in control of the purse strings in the county and all the local governments... , Both these things will be found in the lead editorial in the Sundav Independent today which gives a glimpse of the possible future of the (ilen ,Mden and Its effect nn mil¬ lions of dollars in local t.Txes as well as thousands of local jobs. It should be of special in terest to those m conlrol of the spending of public funds in I.uzerne tounty and it is a warning against loading up on heavy debts which fhe private property owners will have to meet in the future. No Trace Found Of Plane Missing With 44 Aboard -hS> U. S. Will Move Slowly In Disclosing >4-Secrets Search Planes, Ships Unable To Find Clues President Plans To Ask Congress To Raise WA.SIIINGTON flPX-The administration will con- ( h a i r m a n Le\vi.s L.«-—'. .Siraii.xs of thp Atomic Kn rhree Luzerne County crewmen escaped injury when 14 cars uf a 92-car Delaware & Hudson Railroad train jumped thc tracks yesterday morning at Cliff St., Scranton. near the Scranton-Spring Brook Water Service Co. gas plant. The train was made up in Wilkes-Barre and was proceeding to Oneonta, N. V. The five members of Ihe crew, who were riding the Diesel locomotive which did not leave the tracks, were William Dimmock of Dallas, engineer; C, E. Rosser of Kings¬ ton, brakeman: Fred Colvin of Kingston, trainman: George Litlle of Scranton, conductor, and George Anderson of IVloosic, flagman. . The helter-skelter of smashed tank, freight and hopper cars blocked the O&H main line between Wilkes-Barre and Oneonta, N. V, Engineer Dimmock told officials he was operating Ihe Wilkes-Barre to Oneonta train at 28 m.p.h. at the time of Ihe derailment. There is a 35 m.p.h. limit on this section of the main line. There was little damage other than lo railroad properly. Some of Ihe cars ended up only a few feet from gasoline pumps and over a 20.000-gallon underground gasoline stor¬ age tank. (Photo by Grescovic) ovzy Con^n^'\ss'\nr^ di.'«'losH the administration delay in a letter lo a member of the .loinl ( ongrrssional Atomic Knergv Committee. The congressman had asked jiict what President I isenhower had in mind along this line Pane ^"' ^''''"'' '""'* I yVJ j .Strauss said he will nof make / recommendations to President Kisenhower until after talks later this month with Sir Edwin Plow- den. British atomic energy chief. In London, official sources said Britain will .send a team of experts to the United States soon to help organize a joint scientific staff Strauss said he was approach¬ ing the problem on the philos¬ ophy "Ihat It does not make any sense lo withhold from our increa.ses costing allies information which, based a billion dollars a lions TOX OT) E i s p n- .vpstorday to recom- Fate of Dog In Satellite Is Red Secret Not Mentioned For Second Day; Hints at Death va,sL area.s of tlie Pacific early today in an increa.s- ingly hopeless .search for a Pan American Stratocruiser named "Romance of the Skies " that disappeared suddenly Fndav night on a flight from San Fran¬ cisco to Honolulu. The plane, a double-decked luxury craft carrying 44 per¬ son: , made a routitie radio check it the halfway "point of no re¬ turn" Friday afternoon and has not been heard from sinie. Dozens of planes from th« Navy, Coast Guard and com¬ mercial air lines criss-crossed ¦ 100,000 square mile are in per- searching weather all day ;ect U. S. Bouncing Signals Off Surface of Moon As Radio Relay Station WASHINGTON' (lP)_The United State.s ha.s been bombarding: tho moon for more than a decade—with packets of energ'.v. No one ha.s .said yot that this g-ives thc United States territorial rijrhts lo thc;^ moon such a.s might be claimed by the fir.st nation to hit it with a rocket. "But we do claim." a Naval research scientist told the United Press, "that the moon is a fairly high class radio relay station of both military and commercial value" And. he added, moon research! also bas established the "perfect feasibility" of sending radio "commands" to rocket craft in lunar space and of receiving ra¬ dio reports from them. First in 1946 Britain to Send Top A-Experts Joint Science Staff Will Be Organized LONDON (U')— Britain will send a hand-picked team of experts to the law Orders Trim For Sideburn Pair HARTFORD, Conn. dPi—the law ordered a trimming for Richard Parent, 19, and John McGary, 24, when they ap¬ peared in police court ye.ster¬ day to pay breach of peace fines of $.')0 each. Judge Harry G. Kaminski seni the long-sidebumed pair to a barber saying, "that type of haircut makes you young fellows think you've got mus¬ cles to flex." Cold Snap Hits Most of Nation Five Inches of Snow in Great Lakes Area About Face Will Cost U. About 2 Bill : WASHING —P resident •hower was said jto be preparing ; mend pay more than year for military personnel and alVeadv" "known to'ou'r'^otiential^'""^ ^^^e solved the ulti-i '^^^ ^"'' ^""^^l Guard offi- federal Civjl Service employees, ep^^^ies •• P"'^"''^' mate problem of bringing the '^'*''' ^'''^ ^'^''^ exploring the i A reliable soune said the The President took the .same''"« »'^<->' '« «^arth^ |^nf™w'',n"Jh' l^r ^iw i'^n jpay raises are not likely to be- posilion Thur.sday nighl in '"" ^^"^ ^^e second dav in > mwl"P'"ded in the air. Ihey said upon a.Jequate intelligence. jlong, seeking clues to the fate ;of the Stratocrui.ser and its ,16 MOSCOW (IP) — More ''-'-''¦''Angers and eight crew mem- than 1,000 miles of space,%': the same time at least u and scientific secrecy lastjsuiface vessels and two Navy night .shrouded the fate ofl*"''"iarines were pioughin the dog in the Sputnik, The""'°",K^ ^^^ »¦¦«« f*"" f^ces quesion was whether Soviet ^•'^'''^aKe or survivors Navy and " l^ same icome a casualty of the "hudgetifirsl of his "chins up" speechel L'l*' ""'*^l^l..^?'''*^/?5""'^."".'?"''^'^ii^^ 1^^^ ,°L IV^IZ .?,"l!.^'-„ V}? 1 increases in missile and rocket> spending. Abnut-Face By UNITED PRESS The coldest weather of the Fall season slammed across the northern two- thirds of the nation yes¬ terday, whipping up frequent snow squalls across a large por¬ tion of the Great Ukes region. Strong winds buffeted Plains Township man was'northeast, and mercury levels Plains Man Hit by Car .squeezed" next year, despiteion missiles and satellites. c" ^''*., \';^^'^"" "^'' *^=''f''""i LresI*^l»n»U on"fhrj^™l-''„ pressure for multi-billion dollar;Br„-d Agreement Sputnik II failed to mention the resssignal.s on the emergency ! :_ _;..:i- --J .„_i...;'»f"'"" rtRreemeni 40-pound female Arctic sledge ''*''"*"*^y added to tbe fear He and British Prime Minister dog named Laika. !-hat the plane might have Harold Macmiiian agreed herei In London, the British Broad- ^''ow" "P last month on the broad outlines;casting Corp. said its listening Explore AH Theories The administration's decision'of a plan for swapping more posts could not hear the satel- "There are many theories tn reprresents an about-face from nuclear and other military- lite's signals when il pa-sed ^ explored in the sudden and the stand il took during this scientific information among the over Britain. Technicians re- niystenous disappearance of a vear'.s congressional session. The NATO allies. ifused to speculate whether ils ^^fi^ plane," Capt. Sam Read. President vetoed two bills passed Regardless of how far the pro- batteries had run down or -hief press information officer in thc closing hours of the \951 poseeh^tefttslBt+ort goes in relax-;whether the dog may have been i' Pearl Harbor »aid. "However session to raise the pay of postal mg .s-eciirily on atomic informa-ejected along with the trans- 'he explosion theory is receiv- employoees and rrther civil Hon, it is headed for a thorough mitter. in.n priority." sen.'ants. going-over in the House-Senate Lacking official guidance. Cmdr. William E Chapline, Thc government al.so turned.Atomic Energy Committee. Sev- newsmen in Moscow speculated chief of the Coa.st Guard Search down early this year the "Cor-ieral of its "members alreadyiLaika died sometime Thursday and Rescue Section, said that diner Report" plan for a majorlhave put up "go slow" flags. night in her air-conditioned dog-even with a sudden fire or corn- overhaul of military pay scales The present law permits ex-jhouse travelling five miles a'P'ete loss of power the crew Now it is ready to go along with (change of nuclear information j second in space. should be able to .send some most features of this plan and,only where weapons are notj The last report on the dog sort of emergency signals. At recommend it to Congress, even j involved and, even then, under, came Thursday with a Soviet a plane's normal descent of ,'ino though it will initially add sev-1specified safeguards, tfie'eral hunrded million dollars tO| — the defen.se budget A Plains Township man was;nortneasr, ana mercury leveis, .pi,^ ^^^ expenditures, plus/^L-. ^1-..- T^J*... injured in a two car collision at ^'PPf'' " f""^"'"" '"' ^^^ '°"|^!f •^P"'"''<,;"^"7f, """'^^ f, ""^LnGCKUD I OOflV North River and Courtright SIS, «'^ Texas and Tennessee, with o two b, lion d^^ I WUUJ tpmnpratiirp^ in tliP tPPns acrosS '-•'^i^. "OUIfl aun tip tf> an r Plains, lasl nighl at 8. The vic [IT^'TJJ 111 LlZLtl^ l'^.^^ fiscal vear hudget tim, William Morowski, 6,5, of the northern plains, northern 9 Burke St., was admitted to General Hospital for observa- Valley. Rockies and upper with to two billion dollars in defense' over over 2 billion dollars. Mississippi For President 5 Firms Will Push '¦'(jlfif Nuclear Power Plant dence that Russia has dertaken such research. yet un- W A S II 1 N (; T 0 N UP),of space travel -P resident F> i s e n-lthe problem of Ihower will enter Walter!?"'! "'her space phenomena ' » '. ,,.j: , /¦-. living things. Even dead post The United States in 1046 be- United States .shortly to tion, township police reported. ' Freezing temperatures were came the first nation to bounce help organize a joint scientific Morowski was a passenger in|expected by early today a ._. „^.^,„„r »-nwBr r-innr s .u radio pulses off the moon. The:genera) staff, official sources j car operated by Anthony'south as the northern oulf'^"'^'®"'^ f^O^er nam , . ^j„ ^^^^^, ^yj^^p,,,and other space phenomena on British. Canadians and Australi- said ye-sterday. iMinots. ;i2 .lones .St., Hudson, states, with sub-zero readings, WALTHAM. Mass. "P —Kivejop-j A.-mv Medical Cen-u''!."^ things. Even dead, the ans have done ll since. Moon- The move is an outgrowth of which police said was rammed likely in northern Minnesota.,private industrial firms and , J "/'^'"-f ¦'"'^^' y".''<>dy would be useful m radio experts_ here have no evi- the recent Washington talks be- n the inter.seciion by an autolMeanwhile, a warming trendlutilities have formed an asso- '''' toria,\ tot a -1-houi jmortem exammations. tween President Eisenhower and driven by Thomas Bozek, War-iwas expected to develop in theiclation fo design a new-type,""ead to toe medical checkup. Scientists m Moscow nave I Prime Minister Harold Macmil-den PI., Harvey's Lake. Both western prairies. 'nuclear power plant. Uhe White House said yesterday.: hinted efforts might be mady- to The most recent and presum- lan which included discussion!vehicles were towed away. iNine Death* Recorded I The new group, American; The President, who is 67, is bnng the dog down. But inis ably mo.st productive work on of the need for closer Anglo-: R^^pk nostprt tl non bail he a! i V a^^iu. ..or.lNuclear Power Associates, said scheduled to enter the hospitaPnever was stated officially. the U. S. "moon circuit" is a! American .scientific cooperafion fore Justice of the Peace C^arl^s ^»h Tv wl,1horImce fhe ^he radically new high tempera- lato todav and return to the military secret. Also secret is in the face of Soviet advances. Spiamf bcndineth^^^^ high performance plant White House tomorrow after- the moons military significance Chief task of the expertslf'm^of Z man"s inluries ''""^'^^^^ f^^ he a necessarv fore-runner noon as a radio relay .station. But it Britain will send to Washington'"!^,'' "^^ '"f ^ '"'""!'¦ . vlT^ *"-?." ""f Midwest late Fri- ^^ ^,^„^^,,-,^\y competitive nu- It will be his lirst complet,. can safeiv he as.sumed that: will be to plan closer alignment , ^1? accident was investigated day. ITie storm system also ^j^^^ .^^ (physical checkup sin(e Oct. 28. Hard to Jam of scientific re.search and de- "^^ '^,''""'"'^?," ^"'^y Benjanski spawned killer tornadoes tha J^^^ comprises Rav-|l!>.')6. when the examining phy- Broadcasls via the moon would velopment •,"^^^.7^ ^^'''" °^ ^""^ li'if. o«rr^?i'"'^?»- '"^^^^^^^^ Manufacturing Co., ofi^icians reported that he gave be much harder for an encmv Sir Frederick Brundrelt, chief, "'PP"'":^ Tass News Agencv announce- teet per minute from its 10,000 ment that .scientists were re- foot 'evel, it would have had 20 ceiving radioed data onlv on its minutes to fire an SOS, he said, "main" physical functions. This He added that loss of power was taken' to mean its health would allow at least three min- was falling "tes to give some warning and The return of the dog to earth hat once on the water, the crew —a feat similar to the launching fould have used hand-cranked of the satellite itself in its Oibson Girl transmitters implications —would give vital rhe entire Pacific area has data to scientists on the effectsheen alerted to listen fnr hand- cosmic rays, -ranked .SOS signals, buf »o far Wrightlessnes.s,none have been heard, he taid. Reports Skirmish DA.MASCUS HP—.Syrian and Turkish border forces skir¬ mished in a .30-minute firefight yesterday and a Turkish soldi<>r was arrested on .Syrian soil, the ;^overnmenl said last night. , . , , . . The official statement also A cold, cloudy day with snow charged that two unidentified jet irries has been forecast by the ,3^^, f,^^ ^^^^ jjvrian towns Weather Bureau at Avoca Air- ^.j^.^ ,„ t^c Mediterranean ves- 26 to 38 Range Due Here Today . to economically competitive nu- fu".? clear power. . , . that T^J ' find .lames Gavin of the Waltham: Burns & Roe. Inc., "every appearance of being in to jam than ordinarv high fre-scientific adviser to the Defense " ' ' siaies. , ..New 'York architect-engineers; excellent health " quency radio communications. Ministry, was expected to headir_,,i_|i, c;__,_l- c„J| Up to five inches of snow felliciark Bros. Co, divi.sion of His personal physician, ^la)^ port for today. Little change can ::r^:''VC ;!;¦;;;"i^^^ It would take a vast amount of the British group. i^pUTniK dignOIS roil on various areas of the lakes re- Dresser Operations, Inc.. Olean. Cen. Howard Mc(. Snyder, old ^^ expected tomorrow. o » ni.mhpr m/de ^^en tv .t power and much larger equip-Mutual Benefit SYRACUSE, N. Y. (IP—Dean Rio" Duluth, and International n. Y,. compresser and blow^er the United Press he saw no -,,,^. n,„curv dropp.d to 30: P V?ohTof th^ Svr aTTuricish ment to jam the moon circuit, jhe sources said the United Morgan, a General Eleciric engi- Fa'Is. M'nn, and Superior and manufacturers: Griscom-Russell reason whv the thorough ex- ,^ j^^^ ^, ^, ^^ midnight.l.l'J!.™, ,"! '"^ ^^"a" ""^'S" a radio expert .said. sjtes, -n"tur'n wTif s nd a^'com' "eer, said yesterday Sputnik 2 ^s^land^ Wiv. reported five-inch co. ^»p^'f'^Zr:f (^'^J^l^ resident" in gl'od "h"aUh"" ''' l*)" '"^ "^-^ "'iW' ''¦ ¦""''' ¦'' The government said Turkish Even if nuclear war smashed mittee of experts to London un-^toPPfd trjinsmitting us radio snow covers. f'''°?^i'''"T'^r^fh''!P,;„^„n ,T^ In^^ of this confidence '''"^^ "^ '"' )"" ^4 hours previ- horder forces started the battle up e.xisting microwave relay sta-der the projected plan to com- s'pnals at /:n6 P. M. E.S.T. Fn- The colder air, mcanwlnle. dis- lon, Ohio, ^^a exchange e_qu,p- Indicalive of ^^^^^^^^ l, ^_ll _.^^^^^, ^^^^^^ ,_ ^^^ ^^^ ^ Ir^col^^'IaT'^bel'^erL^n'^^^^rm^^tn^eyil^^^ Po^-J-^^^";.^^"'^-'"^--'^ -?':X'd^''^rn^^^^^^^^ '^^ t_oday,. accordin., ,0 the.,,,,/,, ,f ,„ .f,, ,„, ,., two points on earth via the The scientific general .staff is,'*^^ signals failed and south Atlantic stales Nyack. N. Y. moon. It makes no difference expected to thrash oul detailed' ~ of have been checkup. how far apart the eartji stations plans on the scope of pooled re- K|avA# Trnnz-A Oare^rA are. search in various nuclear and '^ev* irnnte wetoro In any case, it is now possi- missile fields, bie to leap-frog the vast Com- Since World War 2, U. S. law munist areas of the world has prevented any great inter- where the free nations have no t'hange of atomic secrets. British relay stations. Turnpike Lacking Wilkes-Barre Signs On Upper End, Too Apparently they don't want anybody to know about Wllkes-Barre when they .'start from the northern end of the Northeastern Turnpike Exten¬ sion, either. This last bit, between Clark's Summit and Moosic was opened last week. There isn't a single Wilkes- Barre sign between Clark's Summit and the Wilkes-Barre Interchange. Ever since the rest of the turnpike was opened long since there has not bee'n a sign to show motorists that Wilkes-Barrc lies ahead as they drive from Philadelphia up. until they are practically here. Scores of motorists getting lost have been reported but the Turnpike Commission ap¬ parently has been too busy with scandals and such to do anything about it and American scientists have I been working independently. I Army Entered Missile Field \During War HUNTSVILLE. Ala. HP—Maj. Gen. H. N. Toftoy. commanding Igeneral of the Army's Redstone Arsenal, said yesterday the Army decided to enter the: guided missile field before thei end of World War 2. Toftoy, one of the key fig-| ures in the Army's "new look,": is the man responsible for "Op-1 eration Paper Clip," the round-j up of German scientists and en-; gineers who fashioned the ter¬ rifying V2 rocket and their even-i tual settling-down in the United States to launch this nation in^ the missile and rocket field Thc team work of the Ger¬ mans and U. S. Army men paid off when Defense Secretary; Neil H. McElroy directed the Army to make the necessary preparations to launch an earth i satellite. It climaxed an uphill: fight for the Army to get intoj the 'moon' field. 5-Day 'Heavenly' Hypnotic Sleep Helps Nervous Woman Add Weight bureau. Record low for Nov. 10 Akaqa near the citv of Kameshi. was in 1956 when the tempera- xhe communique identified th« ture dropped to HI de "rees. alleged Turkish attackers as a A three-inch snowfall, first of patrol but did not give its size, the season, blanketed Erie Coun- Syrian civilian volunteer ty ye.sterday and the forecast j^uards returned the fire for half indicated the area mav have g^ hour, the g-)vemment said, more than 12 inches along the ^ ^as not immediately clear lake today. The snow blanket whether there were any casual- spread as far south as Meadville, (j^. It was a year ago this month ' that most sectirms of North¬ eastern Pennsylvania were vir¬ tually snowbound with a near three-foot fall a; Valley Scenes CHICAGO OPi —A young housewife awakened yesterday from a "heavenly " hypnotic trance and refu.sed to believe thai she had been asleep for five days. Hypnotist Edwin L. Baron brought Mrs. Nora Hughes. 27, oul of the hypnotic sleep into which he placed her to help her gain weight and lose nerv¬ ousness. "When are we going to •tart?" she groggily asked him. She expressed disbelief when Baron told her it was .Satur¬ day and she had been dozing peacefully 20 to 22 hours a day since Monday. "You can say it but I won't believe it. " she told him as she lay on her bed in his of¬ fice before a crowd of report¬ ers. She accepted the fact that she had been out-of-touch with the world for nearly a week after several of Baron's stu¬ dents and coworker* con¬ firmed what the hypnotist told her. Baron brought Mrs, Hughes out of the trance slowly as her husband, Virgil, looked on anxiouslv. The hypnotist told her softly that he was going to count three and she would awaken. He counted and she stirred, looked up at him and asked when he planned to begin the experiment to which she iiad agreed. She lay sleepily on the bed for more than five minutes, gradually looking more awake while Baron and othprs per¬ suaded her she had had a long, restful sleep. rhen she looked at her hand and noticed that a rash which had been bothering her had almosi disappeared. "You've done something to my hand." she accused Baron. She said she felt "mighty strange." "I feel as though I just went to sleep," she said. INSIDE THE INDEPENDENT Amusemcni.... .Around the Town... Three City Hall News .Three Classified Seven County News Three Crossword Puzzle.. .Seven Drew Pearson .Three Editorial Three Frank Tripp Three House Doctor Seven Section Page Section Page .hour 10-11: How Can r.'? ? Six 7 7;Qbituary One 8 10; Politics Three « 1-41 Robert C. Ruark.... Three 7 111.State Capital Five 4 1 State News '..Five .5 6 Sports Three 1 -5 6iTV Four 11 7fTV Programs Five 2 4 Women's Section... four 1-81 Asked if .she usually ate breakfast when she got up. she said she did but didn't "feel like ealmg now," "I feel like I've just eaten, " she said Baron and other members of the Hypnotism Institute of Chicago, which he heads, have fed Mrs. Hughes regularly dur¬ ing her trance. Dr Daniel Thomas of Gary, Ind. who examined the woman after she awakened, said she had gained four pounds—from 102 to 106 pounds. He said her pulse and res¬ piration were normal Hughes, who came to Chi¬ cago to take his wife bark to fheir home and three children m East Gary. Ind., said he was happv to have her awake again If she feels better, it will be worth it," he aaid. Mrs. Hughes, Friday held the first news conference ever conducted under hypnosis and •told newsmen U "feels like heaven." Sonaff Ready To Shed Mate for Roberto ROME IIP—Roberto Rossellini; jand Mrs Sonali Das Gupta yes-i jterday made plans to return toi India where she will file suit forj divorce so she can marry the Italian movie producer, it was reported. ; Friends of .Mrs Das Gupta's father said in Calcutta that she planned to return from Pans to try to gain her freedom from her film producer husband, Hari S. Das Gupta Ihey said she had gone to Pans to "engineer" a legal sepa¬ ration betweei. Ros.sellini and actress Ingrid Bergman and that this had been accomplished ! Rossellini has applied for a new visa to return to India and reports from New Delhi said the government would grant it. Man tr)iing I" •¦oke leav»$ tfroiii Iniiii of Went S)H' fu- neral hmitf Pridny nftervntm nt 4.}3 iiTthr fare of • t$ MPH wind. Heights mart reiurnniff Ut livingroom front, kitrhen anit telling wife "thal'g good hut- termilk iiou bought" and then sunitnoiiing phmtirinn when mate adri^ed Ihc onl'/ thing to drink in the refrigerator was liquid starch. yinn who can't be much af a uludrnt of government over- hi tiring discuenion on eity hudget in Heights taproom and remarking "thai woman council m a n (Mrs. Ethel Price) mn»t harr ftartfd that budget stuff — my wife hat one too!" Young hoft nnking hit way to projertion booth >n eity theater nnd asking o/ierntor "how ahout giving me th* film when iiou'rr through with them, my uneli- fun • moting ptetur» iHaektn*t" 4i- } |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19571110_001.tif |
Month | 11 |
Day | 10 |
Year | 1957 |
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