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FIRST UNITED FUND DRIVE OPENS TOMORROW A Paper For The Home SUNDAY INDEPENDENT CLEAR, COLD high 57, Low 37 Monday—Cloudy, Moderate 0n YEAR — NO. 50 ~ 84 PAGES MMnbcv Aadlt »¦»«— at Clmlattaa WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1956 FSITEn PRESS Win Mnn S«rHr« PRICE 15 CENTS ¦Jf^l i>^-«Ss ^ fe -.v- ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦*' ¦ ^*^ v/- iiffi^ ¦ ^¦•.:X*«8^|g| ak.:..%t^ '.,,¦' 6i. Iw>^'^^^»*'y^ ¦w '¦* -¦.-] THIRD GAME HIGHUGHTS--{wl.?'"'r%?'""'''?1 ¦¦ Dodg'er.s, first baseman Gil Hodges flies througti the air while trying for Chariie Neal's wild throw as New York Yankees* Joe Collins steams towards the base to get on safely on his eighth inning bouncer in the third World Series game which the Yanks won, 5-3, yesterday at Yankee Stadium. Center photo: Brooklyn Dodgers* pitcher Roger Craig hits the dirt to take a throw from Gil Hodges and re¬ tire Collins (15) at first base in the third inning. Hodges had to go deep behind first to nab Collins' grounder. Right photo: New York Yankees' Hank Bauer makes a back-handed catch of a long drive to the right field bullpen by Brooklyn Dodgers' Roy Campanella in the second inning. The catch robbed Campy of a homer but Jackie Robinson scored from third after it to put the Brooks ahead 1-0 at that time. — The fourth game of the World Series will be played today, starting at 2 P.M. Slaughter's 3-Run Homer Gives Yanks 5-3 Victory By OSCAR FRALEY United Preu SporU Writer NEW YORK (IP>—Forty-year-old Country SlauRh-iNgVy PPrf ATK ter, *n old pro who refuses to go down the other .sidei''*¦'/ ¦ ''¦ ¦'»'»*•# ofthe ba.seball hill, came up with a three-run homer! . • t\ f vesterdav that gave the New York Yankees a ^-<^ niMttlt IIOtAIICCI victory and their fir.st win^— Hlvllllt l/ul vlljV over the Brooklyn Dodg-i i» t^ ¦ prs after two straight'P|^l||»a KATArnC World Senei defeats. | ||||^\J IIVVUI UJ The Yankees had their backs tight against the Yankee Sta dium wall — two >^mes down md trailing 2-1—and were as, iloomy as the cloudy skies Not Political above when the old warhor.se i ie to the plate with two; on and two away in thej inning. j Crowd of 73,»77 Mickey Mantl*, the home run iere of the Yankees, with a weak Against Subs New Depth Charge Hailed by Service As 'Revolutionar/ Sl,334,955 Set as Goal Of Volunteers Fifty-Nine Agencies Will Share In Effort Of Nnited Campaign Using Barbers In Safety Drive MINDEN, Germany OOP)—Two j traffic officials are using the j garrulous local barbera to ' campaign for driving safety. > The barbers voluntered for briefing from the police acci¬ dent squad. Then they re¬ turned to their chairs to preach safety and discusa traffic problems while their captive audiences get shaves and haircuts. Adlai's Loose Talk' Is Damaging Security, President Charges George Kario, 56, Was Working Traps Tomorrow night willj mark the official opening; lg_^ ^1.^,^ J of the initial campaign ofiriCdQllQ Wyoming Valley's Unitedi Fund as thousands of volun-j |Lii#iM d«#%^ teer workers in the health and!l¥llin ^llWl welfare drive for $L334,955i i«>de to the plate with two; TDI Wnier warns M» Revoiurionary pack the Paramount Theaterj Kt on and two away m thej . . . tl • • i .,,.„,,»», ^ ^ ^ »» „^ f°'' *•" kickoff event showingi Ifcimning. ! Agoinst Their Use WASH INGTON aP) of the motion picture, "War! —¦ Recent official state-!«"<' P^ac*" ] WASHINGTON (IP) ment.s added up yesterday! The theater event, free to all! A Luzerne County re.si- -FBl Director-J. Edgar to a strong indication thatI^I^if'^^f J" *!:*1^!^^^^^^ was injured about . . . oover ye.sterdav warned the Nav>- has perfected "nitlviiies on Public louare the face and neck in an But Slander, who came the nation's police offi-{atomic depth charge for uae The 1,50-member band of thei accidental S h o o t i n g at w>w^»'i^i>N»'»wiw^»»i»^i<»M»i>i»M» cers against using confidential «8ain.st enemy submarines. Northwest Area High SchooMsjSplit Rock Lodge in the Poconos TnAnii'm ttnHi>rii>» criminal files as political an»mu-l The charge was tested in pro- slated to parade through the yesterday morning „.»,^^rf . !. ^nition for the November elec-totype form laat year off the " YANKEES — Sturdlvant and tions. Pacific coast lerrt- DODGERS —Erksine Cimpanella. ^^^^ agencies, he cautionedjmade aiiy publi^report" oii tiiei^Y®"' """^ at~ a skeet range at" the, ¦M.»i<.*».».«i**.«^.»ii«i^».».N^.^ agaiiist use of such data byloperation. except to say It was'°^ **'" theater A United Fundliodge. The mishap occurred be-' ts the Yankees Aug 26 and is "unscrupulous individuals who > success. j program will take place on fheJtween 11 and 11:30 A. M. The fighting for a full Series share.»*«•« *<> subvert police activities in Los Angeles last week ^'^^"^ "^ T* Paramount with victim was admitted to St Jo- which would be welcomed with for greedy, personal ends." ^avy Secretary Charles S ; George Guthrie Conyngham, UF seph's Hospital, Hazleton, about I new babv expected momen-j . "Election campaigns, espe-1Thomas said this country has a j^*"*''"' chairman, officiating. an hour later. Karlo received unly at home, didn't disappoint cially, tempt the unprincipledjnew secret weapon that will Covers 59 Agencies treatment in the hospital emer- tlie roaring crowd of 7,3,977, ladvocates of this vicious prac-l "revolutionize" submarine war- .. The colorful affair will high downtown section and lead ai George Karlo, 56, of 520 Green motorcade of campaign notables Ist, Freeland Borough, received . In his monthly message to| Neither the Navy nor thej'o 'he Paramount. Floodlights j multiple gunshot wounds of the ¦"° state and local law enforce-; Atomic Energy Commission has*""* ''^® ''*''"' coverage of thelface and neck while working the serted the weapon would elimi nate submarine warfare entirelv. (Nd Eno* worked the count "ce," he said, to 3 and I and. In the twilight I Years ot Effort of hil rareer, reached back 10 u. ...a ,u,. -_i„ .i,miii>Vi U"'" -"•"••"••••^ -...,,.a,¦^ ci.i.i<:it, that put the Yankee, on top j;^^, ,,^ enforcement officers'f.*7*/^T- "cast off tha boiidag* of vm*]\^™tr»} Comments politics." i ^ v,'eek ago at Newport News, A„ PUT m^^i...„.r. •,»,,u,„.^l^"' Adm. Arleigh A. Burke An FBI spokesman explained ,_,__n-_^j „. „.„, ,„-^ ^m j__*u that the FBI co-operates with rf "*'?,"?.'' ", "*'* '^Jf **f ''^^1'^ local police on fingVrprints and|!'°'"'*, Speak-ng at the launch other criminal data on the as-i'"« .•»' *^« liMger, third super sumption that the FBI's in-IS"";'*'' ?i ^^* Forrestal class, formation is to be kept confi-^".f^* «*'«'^ . dential. But Hoover said this is| ^•'f ¦I"..'?'" s.'ster »h'P« »« not always the case. 'capable of defending themselves „,„, , , , with missiles, supersonic air- "The person who improperly! craft, and wiih a new type of discloses an Identification rec- jepth bomb that makes the ord of anyone, no matteV how enemy submarine service haz- worthy the reason may appeangrdous Indeed The irmr »¦« lanirv PniTor <>" 'he surfsce, places himself _. . ,. ,j rra^ who hadn't w^n'^. «m^i" »™ indefensible position," hei.^Thomas may not have sad ' raig, wno nadnt won a game, .. •' the new secret weapon would S'n» August — but might have;"". .„,. "eliminate" submarine warfare. ve«wday except for Old Coun- "^^ S?^v^ 1^1 J^J thi^But if " fs. as observers here |[y«>last into the right fMd\{y^}^'^J^[yjf_ !i'?^i"J„\'?!^ I believe, an atomic depth bomh fare. Some reports said he as- "S^* ^^^ opening of the health to stay. Slaughter had hit his lilt previous World Series homer In 1946, almost 10 ;«ars to tha day. Young Whitey Ford, who had dropped the first game at Fbbets Fifld. took it from there. He pvt up one more run but fought his way out of a tough seventh Inning Jam, got a big bruit In the ninth and won his tourth World Series game by •caftering eight hits. tow Roger Craig Vanli. )pn Yanks had tied It up once *i«t, on a second Inning «™«r by Billy Martin after the "oajen jumped into the lead « tN top of the second. The »«*s moved ahead by one In ™ Wtth and—after Slaughter's H WOW—scored once again in '"« seventh onlv to have it "latched by the Yankees in the •'enth. Brooklyn, fighting for a sweep w the first three games—a defi- L-J™™ which no team in Series hS f"^^ had come back— ^Ped into the lead in the top ?»• second when Jackie Rob- ¦"» walked on five pitches. «f?IL ?"*'«"¦ •** hitting star lrf first two games, lashed a «nRle into the hole at short to ¦""2 Robinson to second. Rob- S*«* third when Carl «,,»?. "l*^ '" ri«ht and trotted ^"wlly home as Roy Campan- "' "^e Hank Bauer back to '^Winued on Page 5, Sec. .1) data to become the potential tool of selfish ambition. Such unwarranted action violates the mutual trust on which the en¬ tire co-operative endeavor of the fingerprint identification sy¬ stem is based," it would be a powerful defense against submarines as well as a powerful weapon against surface craft. Thousands Witness Pope's Beatification , VATICAN CITY (IP — ThoU' ^_ sands of foreign and Italian Pi'-'ii,''^'! r-,'^""/on' grims jammed Rome yesterday|tne American and welfare campaien which will see more than 4,000 volun¬ teers covering every area of the valley, Nanticoke and Pitts¬ ton. The drive will continue through Oct. 30. The campaign is the big¬ gest, single effort for health and welfare ever held in the valley area and represents the minimum needs of 59 lo¬ cal, atate and national agen¬ cies. Leading the various volunteer divisions of the UF appeal are: Andrew J. Sordoni ,Tr., advance gifts: Atty. Louis Shaffer, pro¬ fessional: Frank Townend, F, E. Parkhurst 3d, and Robert. Bum- side, groups: Morton Blum, cen¬ tral; Mrs. Min Lurye Matheson, garment; David Cummings, mines; Donald Allan, William (Continued on Page 2, Sec. 1) gency room and also had X-rays taken to determine the full ex¬ tent of his injuries. Hospital attaches last night reported the Freeland man still under observation. However, he was described as being "fairly comfortable." State Police of Fern Ridge, who Investigated, disclo.sed Mr. Karlo had been accidentally shot by James Werner, 37. of Bell Harbor, N. Y. Karlo was shoot¬ ing clay pigeons with Werner and another man, all guests of the lodge, when the 12 gauge shotgun accidentally discharged and injured the Freeland man about the face and neck. Werner, who never handled a gun befori. was ready to fire the last of 25 shots, when the shotgun went off, accidentally. Police said Karlo was in the hut on the other side of the range when struck by the gunfire. UN Schedules Secret Talks On Suez Dispute Egyptians Willing; Dulles Sees Justice Desirable As Peace UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (LP» — The United Nation.s Security Council may be able to bring Egypt and the West together for negotiations on the Suez Canal dispute through secret rather than public sessions, Western diplomats said yester¬ day. They said that Egypt would have an opportunity for present¬ ing any proposals it might have for settlement as closed-door meetings which were suggested by Britain and endorsed by the United States. Egyptian Foreign Minister Ignorance or His Willingness To Gamble Behind Stevenson*s Remarks, Eisenhower States WASHINGTON (IP)—President Eisenhower charged last night that Adiai E. Stevenson's "loose talk" about ending the draft is damaging "America's se¬ curity interests throughout the world." ^ He declared that it shows "either ignorance of our military needs or a willingness to take a chance with our nation's security." "The free world looks to the United States for leadership in standing firm against fhe Com¬ munist push," he said. "Wa must not now betray that lead¬ ership by loo.se talk of soon ending the draft. The world can only construe that as letting down our guard." Mr. Eisenhower said he fs Tito Returns From Yalta To Speak Tomorrow On Russian Talks BELGRADE (IP)—Mar¬ shal Tito kept a flood ofi making a "constant effort" to Comm U ni st dignitaries "l^."" military manpower from all over Furonei without damaging the nation's ..;. ; . ? r ^""^"P^ securifv." But he said the draft waiting yesterday for answerslj, "indispensable" for maintain- to their questions about the re-,ing a force of more than L.-SOO,- sults of his eight-day .«recret con-j000 men and an "essential ference with Russian leaders at;stimulant for building no the ^®'ta. I necessary reserve strength," Virtually every Western andiMust Not Invite War Communist diplomat in Belgrade^ "All America longs for a —except the Russians—and vis-peafeful world based on justice Miifmoud Fawzi said he hoped '"'^ Communist Party delega-jin which the need for great arm- theoroDosedT secret se^s^ons''"*? J'"S'' "f? ^'"' '"'«'^i«wsiamems will no longer exist," he would "helD'' towards '/"soIu^ItI"'*,''*, ^"''°"*''P'"''^^"'u^"*i^''"l- "^"t the cause of world wouia neip towards a soiUT|T,to failed to see any of them'peace and of confidence and y. IN, secreiary-tjenerai uagipaiace. fh»r»ri Kv c,io<,ocHr.r>. >,. «ffi.^( Hammarskjold in the aftemoon for "a comparison of notes and ideas," and added that he was prepared to meet "everybody I can" to facilitate a solution. Dulles Stresses Justice Secretary of State .Tohn Fos ter Dulles said yesterday the United Nations Security Council thered by suggestions, the effect Plymouth Man Is Injured Chester Martin. 23. of 2^4\\o witness the beaUfication ofj Attacking the Republi- - - . .iD«~.t tvT cans as "the party of big- 'Little Guy' Not Helped By Ike, Stevenson Says SPRINGFIELD, Ma^s. (IP)—Adiai E. Steven.son de¬ clared last night that President Eisenhower has ex¬ erted "too little leadership to help 'the little guy' " in economy. Vine St., Plymouth, was admit¬ ted to Nanticoke Hospital last night at 11:30 with a severe laceration of the scalp, the re¬ sult of an auto accident at the Mocanaqua-Shickshinny Bridge. Cari Provicki. 218 Vina St., Plymouth, driver of the car, was treated for lacerations of thei Vienna knee and released. According to State Police, the car failed to negotiate a sharp curve at the bridge and went Pope Innocent XI He becomes the ninth Pontiff beatified but not yet canonized. nes s," the Democratic Heavy Fog It was due to an appeal bv Pope I presidential candidate con-j| fcj,^^^,*,^ — - tended the GOP is leading the|in rOCOIlOS Innocent XI that the nations of Europe undertook a holy war against the Turks wlio had in¬ vaded the Balkan states and were threatening (he city of Valley Scenes down the embankment. or-O/d Youth Robs Another \^!^[[odelphia Police Station compass in his JJ^DELPHIA, (IP)—A 15- , °^ «rrested on a burglary 2'» beat and robbed an- >«terd'ay""'^ *° ^ questioned i^iv Am» / '" • center- Patrolman Philip Bet/, aaid ¦rly veS; .1*" ^^'^y *'ore he heard a ,cuffle in the room Imin '^ morning by a and found Days beating the "•crash ^*,'* investigated other boy. The younger boy *«n said ?: *'¦"• '"'e patrol- told the policeman Days had KWtet knl, ^°^^^- ^^'^ 'o"'' robbed him of several cenU ""ves. three hunting and a wrist watch. knives and pockets. Days was taken to the llth and Winter Sts. Police station and held in a detention room to await questioning with • 14-year-old boy picked up for violating the curfew. North End youngster, who braved a barrage of po»teri- or-aimed needle* during re¬ cent illnest, going to Kirby Health Center for polio »hot And stunning staff by remov¬ ing trousers instead of roll¬ ing up sleeve. Yaung wife, mincing no words at home as she repri- viands husband for failing to pick her up on Public Square, onlu to be reminded that she had taken ear to work that day. Member of so-called "Bot¬ tle Ganjj" switching from Adiai pin to Ike campaign button as he spotted City Hall »fficial and movsd in for a sueetufui touch. He was expected to begin re-jof which would be greatly to oeiving the stream of diplomats weaken our defenses ... we and party visitors, including must not by weakness invite an- groups from Italy and Bulgaria,lother war" tomorrow. ( Mr. Eisenhower expressed c„ii«i Pn<i>i»« I'hese views in a 1,200-word SoHd Position 'statement issued by the White Diplomats believed that the House. It was one of the sharp- w...,, ........J ^v.-.-v...'^?"^^'"^"'^^ had further solidified,est attacks he has made yet on faces a "crucial test" in han-'J'*° '" h's independent stand.Democratic presidential candi- dling the Suez Canal dispute ir,:'"'" Jugoslavia s right to a 'sep-,date Stevenson, a way that will insure "justice"!*'"*'e road to socialism. i Before issuing the statement, as well as peace. j An outcast by Stalinist stand-Mr. Eisenhower conferred at the He told « Williams Colleee I'''^''' *he rest of the Communist|White House with Vice Presi- convocation that there has been'^"'"''^ has warmed up «n him to dent Richard M. Nixon on the "strong worid-wide sentiment^!?* ^'P^ '^here yesterday the progress of the GOP campaign, against using force" to settle the;"""P"'«n «°\l'^T''!l' '" Buda-: Nixon who retumed eariier last Suez crisis but he warned that,P?*' «h.umed the bodies of four:week from a .?2-state campaign those who are concerned aboutJh'Jfh officials executed as 'Tito-itour, wil leave again this week ,,-.." ._ io.in ._j ..I to yjsit ]4 more states. Call Draft Obsolete Stevenson told a Minneapolis, Minn., audience Sept. 29 that with more effective modem weapons "we may very well find that some time in the not peace ought to be. equally con-!i*ti''in^l349'ind gave them re cerned about justice" for userj nations. burial with full honors. Charges Hostility iEisonhowers Give "Is it just, or even tolerable,; , that great nations . . , whoseiTo United Campaign economies depend upon the use; WASHINGTON <lP~Presidentivery far distant future we can °M- ^^"^'. .,""'? A*:"Pl/"'and Mrs. Eisenhower made theiriabolish th« draft and at tha exclusive control of this inter¬ national waterway by a govern-1 ;rs"Fu"nd" yesterday ment which professes to be bit terly hostile?" contribution to the United Giv-isame time have e stronger de- ] fense at lower cost." He called j'the draft "necessary" at pre.sent The President presented ; c h e c k for undisclosed]hut described it as a "waste- country "into a new age of in dustrial feudalism," | Rai„ ^d heavy fog slowed The Republican managersitraffic in the Pocono Mountains! see America as a big, well-oiled'last night, particularly in the! company, controlled by the men who, because thev run the big corporations, ought to run the country, too," Stevenson said. Fem Ridge area Officials of Martz an<} Grey¬ hound bus lines said their driv¬ ers encountered pockets of fog Dulles said "that is the issue amount to James H. Lemon, If"'- inefficient and often unfair chairman of the special gifts iway of maintaining our armed unit of the Washington fund. I forces and now it is fast becom- Mr Eisenhower j o k i n g I v mP »" obsolete way'' promised to make good "if the! Defense policies have boiled check bounces," (Continued on Page 5, See. 1) "Their attitude toward Amer-;and were running from 20 to 30i iea is that of the big boss to-minutes behind schedule, ward the boys . . . just as the The Weather Bureau at big boss is nice at Christmas, so the Republicans put on a big smile around election time. "Left alone, they will lead us (Continued on Page 2, Sec. 1) Avoca reported fpg along the Susquehanna River and in moun¬ tains but predicted clearing early this moming. INSIDE THE INDEPENDENT Section Page Amusement Four Around the Town..Three Better English Two City Hall Newt ....Five Ciassifi'«d Six Countv News Five Crossword Puzzle ..Six Drew Pearson Three Editorial Three Frank Tripp Three How Can 1 ? ? 7...Four 11 9 .5 4 1-5 5 5 8 S 9 Section Pasei Look and Learn ... .One 11; Obituary .....One &\ Politics .c Three 8! Radio Four 10.; Robert C. Ruark ...Three 9i SUte Capital Three 10 { State News Three 111 Sports ......*•..• .Three 1-^5' TV rf..Four 10 1-9 21 Women'! Section ..Four now before" the Security Coun cil which took up the Suez mat¬ ter on Friday. The council will resume its deliberations tomor¬ row. River Dragged It Was a Rough Doy for Parsons For Young Boys In Staid Old London Yesterday some of the men said caused the deaths of four company executives during the last four years. The second parson, Rev. Philip St. John Ross of Wood¬ stock, was mourned as dead when he disappeared while swimming 14 months ago. Po¬ lice traced him to Biedford, near London. They said he. had shed his clerical garb and' was living under an assumed name with a wealthy widow from his old parish. The third. Rev. Maurice El- rington, was dismissed by the Church of England for leav¬ ing his family for a two-week holiday with another well-to- do widow. CAMDEN, N. (IP — Police grappled in the -elaware River last night for two small boys; believed to have drowned. i The grappling operations: started after a thorough searchj of the riverfront after a four-| year-old playmate of the pairi retumed home late Friday with! his clothing wet. H. told his' parents he had been playing! with the other two o.i the rivcrj bank. The missing were three-year-; old Frederick Maier of 243: Bums St., and his four-year-old playmate, Robert Cline of 228 Burns St. Their friend, Joseph! Schmidt Jr., told his parents hej had left them beside the river' throwing ¦tones into the w»t*r. LONDON (IB—Parsons had their prcblenls in Britain yes¬ terday. One was called to chase a hex from an auto accessories factory, A second .vas hunted for allegedly livinp with a rich widow instead of his wife, / third was dismissed from the Church ot England for leaving his wife and fami¬ ly to rua off with another rich widow. The first. Canon George Beanett prayed before 170 workers at the auto plant in Bedford and blessed each work shop and bench. Ben¬ nett was invited to the piant becauM of a "hoodoo" which \
Object Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Date | 1956-10-07 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1956 |
Volume | 50 |
Issue | 50 |
Publisher | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Luzerne County, Wilkes-Barre |
Type | Sunday Newspaper |
Source | Microfilm |
Format | tiff |
Subject | Wilkes Barre PA Sunday Newspaper |
Description | An archive of the Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent newspaper. |
Rights | Public Domain |
Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Date | 1956-10-07 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1956 |
Volume | 50 |
Issue | 50 |
Publisher | Wilkes-Barre Independent Company |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Luzerne County, Wilkes-Barre |
Type | Sunday Newspaper |
Source | Microfilm |
Format | tiff |
Subject | Wilkes Barre PA Sunday Newspaper |
Description | An archive of the Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent newspaper. |
Rights | Public Domain |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | 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 31869 kilobytes. |
FileName | 19561007_001.tif |
Date Digital | 2011-12-29 |
FullText |
FIRST UNITED FUND DRIVE OPENS TOMORROW
A Paper For The Home
SUNDAY INDEPENDENT
CLEAR, COLD
high 57, Low 37
Monday—Cloudy, Moderate
0n YEAR — NO. 50 ~ 84 PAGES
MMnbcv Aadlt »¦»«— at Clmlattaa
WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1956
FSITEn PRESS Win Mnn S«rHr«
PRICE 15 CENTS
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THIRD GAME HIGHUGHTS--{wl.?'"'r%?'""'''?1
¦¦ Dodg'er.s, first baseman Gil
Hodges flies througti the air while trying for Chariie Neal's wild throw as New York Yankees* Joe Collins steams towards the base to get on safely on his eighth inning bouncer in the third World Series game which the Yanks won, 5-3, yesterday at Yankee Stadium. Center photo: Brooklyn Dodgers* pitcher Roger Craig hits the dirt to take a throw from Gil Hodges and re¬
tire Collins (15) at first base in the third inning. Hodges had to go deep behind first to nab Collins' grounder. Right photo: New York Yankees' Hank Bauer makes a back-handed catch of a long drive to the right field bullpen by Brooklyn Dodgers' Roy Campanella in the second inning. The catch robbed Campy of a homer but Jackie Robinson scored from third after it to put the Brooks ahead 1-0 at that time. — The fourth game of the World Series will be played today, starting at 2 P.M.
Slaughter's 3-Run Homer Gives Yanks 5-3 Victory
By OSCAR FRALEY United Preu SporU Writer
NEW YORK (IP>—Forty-year-old Country SlauRh-iNgVy PPrf ATK
ter, *n old pro who refuses to go down the other .sidei''*¦'/ ¦ ''¦ ¦'»'»*•# ofthe ba.seball hill, came up with a three-run homer! . • t\ f
vesterdav that gave the New York Yankees a ^-<^ niMttlt IIOtAIICCI
victory and their fir.st win^— Hlvllllt l/ul vlljV
over the Brooklyn Dodg-i i» t^ ¦
prs after two straight'P|^l||»a KATArnC World Senei defeats. | ||||^\J IIVVUI UJ
The Yankees had their backs tight against the Yankee Sta dium wall — two >^mes down md trailing 2-1—and were as, iloomy as the cloudy skies
Not Political
above when the old warhor.se i ie to the plate with two; on and two away in thej
inning. j
Crowd of 73,»77 Mickey Mantl*, the home run iere of the Yankees, with a weak
Against Subs
New Depth Charge Hailed by Service As 'Revolutionar/
Sl,334,955 Set as Goal Of Volunteers
Fifty-Nine Agencies Will Share In Effort Of Nnited Campaign
Using Barbers In Safety Drive
MINDEN, Germany OOP)—Two j traffic officials are using the j garrulous local barbera to ' campaign for driving safety. >
The barbers voluntered for briefing from the police acci¬ dent squad. Then they re¬ turned to their chairs to preach safety and discusa traffic problems while their captive audiences get shaves and haircuts.
Adlai's Loose Talk' Is Damaging Security, President Charges
George Kario, 56, Was Working Traps
Tomorrow night willj
mark the official opening; lg_^ ^1.^,^ J of the initial campaign ofiriCdQllQ
Wyoming Valley's Unitedi
Fund as thousands of volun-j |Lii#iM d«#%^
teer workers in the health and!l¥llin ^llWl
welfare drive for $L334,955i
i«>de to the plate with two; TDI Wnier warns M» Revoiurionary pack the Paramount Theaterj
Kt on and two away m thej . . . tl • • i .,,.„,,»», ^ ^ ^ »» „^ f°'' *•" kickoff event showingi
Ifcimning. ! Agoinst Their Use WASH INGTON aP) of the motion picture, "War!
—¦ Recent official state-!«"<' P^ac*" ]
WASHINGTON (IP) ment.s added up yesterday! The theater event, free to all! A Luzerne County re.si- -FBl Director-J. Edgar to a strong indication thatI^I^if'^^f J" *!:*1^!^^^^^^ was injured about
. . . oover ye.sterdav warned the Nav>- has perfected "nitlviiies on Public louare the face and neck in an
But Slander, who came the nation's police offi-{atomic depth charge for uae The 1,50-member band of thei accidental S h o o t i n g at w>w^»'i^i>N»'»wiw^»»i»^i<»M»i>i»M» cers against using confidential «8ain.st enemy submarines. Northwest Area High SchooMsjSplit Rock Lodge in the Poconos
TnAnii'm ttnHi>rii>» criminal files as political an»mu-l The charge was tested in pro- slated to parade through the yesterday morning
„.»,^^rf . !. ^nition for the November elec-totype form laat year off the "
YANKEES — Sturdlvant and tions. Pacific coast
lerrt- DODGERS —Erksine
Cimpanella. ^^^^ agencies, he cautionedjmade aiiy publi^report" oii tiiei^Y®"' """^ at~ a skeet range at" the,
¦M.»i<.*».».«i**.«^.»ii«i^».».N^.^ agaiiist use of such data byloperation. except to say It was'°^ **'" theater A United Fundliodge. The mishap occurred be-' ts the Yankees Aug 26 and is "unscrupulous individuals who > success. j program will take place on fheJtween 11 and 11:30 A. M. The
fighting for a full Series share.»*«•« *<> subvert police activities in Los Angeles last week ^'^^"^ "^ T* Paramount with victim was admitted to St Jo- which would be welcomed with for greedy, personal ends." ^avy Secretary Charles S ; George Guthrie Conyngham, UF seph's Hospital, Hazleton, about
I new babv expected momen-j . "Election campaigns, espe-1Thomas said this country has a j^*"*''"' chairman, officiating. an hour later. Karlo received unly at home, didn't disappoint cially, tempt the unprincipledjnew secret weapon that will Covers 59 Agencies treatment in the hospital emer-
tlie roaring crowd of 7,3,977, ladvocates of this vicious prac-l "revolutionize" submarine war- .. The colorful affair will high
downtown section and lead ai George Karlo, 56, of 520 Green motorcade of campaign notables Ist, Freeland Borough, received . In his monthly message to| Neither the Navy nor thej'o 'he Paramount. Floodlights j multiple gunshot wounds of the ¦"° state and local law enforce-; Atomic Energy Commission has*""* ''^® ''*''"' coverage of thelface and neck while working the
serted the weapon would elimi nate submarine warfare entirelv.
(Nd Eno* worked the count "ce," he said, to 3 and I and. In the twilight I Years ot Effort of hil rareer, reached back 10 u. ...a ,u,. -_i„ .i,miii>Vi U"'" -"•"••"••••^ -...,,.a,¦^ ci.i.i<:it,
that put the Yankee, on top j;^^, ,,^ enforcement officers'f.*7*/^T-
"cast off tha boiidag* of vm*]\^™tr»} Comments
politics." i ^ v,'eek ago at Newport News,
A„ PUT m^^i...„.r. •,»,,u,„.^l^"' Adm. Arleigh A. Burke An FBI spokesman explained ,_,__n-_^j „. „.„, ,„-^ ^m j__*u
that the FBI co-operates with rf "*'?,"?.'' ", "*'* '^Jf **f ''^^1'^ local police on fingVrprints and|!'°'"'*, Speak-ng at the launch other criminal data on the as-i'"« .•»' *^« liMger, third super sumption that the FBI's in-IS"";'*'' ?i ^^* Forrestal class, formation is to be kept confi-^".f^* «*'«'^ . dential. But Hoover said this is| ^•'f ¦I"..'?'" s.'ster »h'P« »« not always the case. 'capable of defending themselves
„,„, , , , with missiles, supersonic air-
"The person who improperly! craft, and wiih a new type of discloses an Identification rec- jepth bomb that makes the ord of anyone, no matteV how enemy submarine service haz- worthy the reason may appeangrdous Indeed The irmr »¦« lanirv PniTor <>" 'he surfsce, places himself _. . ,. ,j
rra^ who hadn't w^n'^. «m^i" »™ indefensible position," hei.^Thomas may not have sad ' raig, wno nadnt won a game, .. •' the new secret weapon would
S'n» August — but might have;"". .„,. "eliminate" submarine warfare.
ve«wday except for Old Coun- "^^ S?^v^ 1^1 J^J thi^But if " fs. as observers here |[y«>last into the right fMd\{y^}^'^J^[yjf_ !i'?^i"J„\'?!^ I believe, an atomic depth bomh
fare. Some reports said he as- "S^* ^^^ opening of the health
to stay. Slaughter had hit his lilt previous World Series homer In 1946, almost 10 ;«ars to tha day.
Young Whitey Ford, who had dropped the first game at Fbbets Fifld. took it from there. He pvt up one more run but fought his way out of a tough seventh Inning Jam, got a big bruit In the ninth and won his tourth World Series game by •caftering eight hits.
tow Roger Craig
Vanli.
)pn Yanks had tied It up once *i«t, on a second Inning «™«r by Billy Martin after the "oajen jumped into the lead « tN top of the second. The »«*s moved ahead by one In ™ Wtth and—after Slaughter's H WOW—scored once again in '"« seventh onlv to have it "latched by the Yankees in the •'enth.
Brooklyn, fighting for a sweep w the first three games—a defi- L-J™™ which no team in Series hS f"^^ had come back— ^Ped into the lead in the top ?»• second when Jackie Rob- ¦"» walked on five pitches.
«f?IL ?"*'«"¦ •** hitting star lrf first two games, lashed a «nRle into the hole at short to ¦""2 Robinson to second. Rob- S*«* third when Carl «,,»?. "l*^ '" ri«ht and trotted ^"wlly home as Roy Campan- "' "^e Hank Bauer back to '^Winued on Page 5, Sec. .1)
data to become the potential tool of selfish ambition. Such unwarranted action violates the mutual trust on which the en¬ tire co-operative endeavor of the fingerprint identification sy¬ stem is based,"
it would be a powerful defense against submarines as well as a powerful weapon against surface craft.
Thousands Witness Pope's Beatification
, VATICAN CITY (IP — ThoU' ^_
sands of foreign and Italian Pi'-'ii,''^'! r-,'^""/on' grims jammed Rome yesterday|tne American
and welfare campaien which will see more than 4,000 volun¬ teers covering every area of the valley, Nanticoke and Pitts¬ ton. The drive will continue through Oct. 30.
The campaign is the big¬ gest, single effort for health and welfare ever held in the valley area and represents the minimum needs of 59 lo¬ cal, atate and national agen¬ cies.
Leading the various volunteer divisions of the UF appeal are: Andrew J. Sordoni ,Tr., advance gifts: Atty. Louis Shaffer, pro¬ fessional: Frank Townend, F, E. Parkhurst 3d, and Robert. Bum- side, groups: Morton Blum, cen¬ tral; Mrs. Min Lurye Matheson, garment; David Cummings, mines; Donald Allan, William (Continued on Page 2, Sec. 1)
gency room and also had X-rays taken to determine the full ex¬ tent of his injuries.
Hospital attaches last night reported the Freeland man still under observation. However, he was described as being "fairly comfortable."
State Police of Fern Ridge, who Investigated, disclo.sed Mr. Karlo had been accidentally shot by James Werner, 37. of Bell Harbor, N. Y. Karlo was shoot¬ ing clay pigeons with Werner and another man, all guests of the lodge, when the 12 gauge shotgun accidentally discharged and injured the Freeland man about the face and neck.
Werner, who never handled a gun befori. was ready to fire the last of 25 shots, when the shotgun went off, accidentally. Police said Karlo was in the hut on the other side of the range when struck by the gunfire.
UN Schedules Secret Talks On Suez Dispute
Egyptians Willing; Dulles Sees Justice Desirable As Peace
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (LP» — The United Nation.s Security Council may be able to bring Egypt and the West together for negotiations on the Suez Canal dispute through secret rather than public sessions, Western diplomats said yester¬ day.
They said that Egypt would have an opportunity for present¬ ing any proposals it might have for settlement as closed-door meetings which were suggested by Britain and endorsed by the United States.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ignorance or His Willingness To Gamble Behind Stevenson*s Remarks, Eisenhower States
WASHINGTON (IP)—President Eisenhower charged last night that Adiai E. Stevenson's "loose talk" about ending the draft is damaging "America's se¬ curity interests throughout the world."
^ He declared that it
shows "either ignorance of our military needs or a willingness to take a chance with our nation's security."
"The free world looks to the United States for leadership in standing firm against fhe Com¬ munist push," he said. "Wa must not now betray that lead¬ ership by loo.se talk of soon ending the draft. The world can only construe that as letting down our guard." Mr. Eisenhower said he fs
Tito Returns From Yalta
To Speak Tomorrow On Russian Talks
BELGRADE (IP)—Mar¬ shal Tito kept a flood ofi making a "constant effort" to Comm U ni st dignitaries "l^."" military manpower from all over Furonei without damaging the nation's ..;. ; . ? r ^""^"P^ securifv." But he said the draft
waiting yesterday for answerslj, "indispensable" for maintain- to their questions about the re-,ing a force of more than L.-SOO,- sults of his eight-day .«recret con-j000 men and an "essential ference with Russian leaders at;stimulant for building no the ^®'ta. I necessary reserve strength,"
Virtually every Western andiMust Not Invite War Communist diplomat in Belgrade^ "All America longs for a —except the Russians—and vis-peafeful world based on justice
Miifmoud Fawzi said he hoped '"'^ Communist Party delega-jin which the need for great arm-
theoroDosedT secret se^s^ons''"*? J'"S'' "f? ^'"' '"'«'^i«wsiamems will no longer exist," he
would "helD'' towards '/"soIu^ItI"'*,''*, ^"''°"*''P'"''^^"'u^"*i^''"l- "^"t the cause of world wouia neip towards a soiUT|T,to failed to see any of them'peace and of confidence and
y. IN, secreiary-tjenerai uagipaiace. fh»r»ri Kv c,io<,ocHr.r>. >,. «ffi.^(
Hammarskjold in the aftemoon for "a comparison of notes and ideas," and added that he was prepared to meet "everybody I can" to facilitate a solution.
Dulles Stresses Justice
Secretary of State .Tohn Fos ter Dulles said yesterday the United Nations Security Council
thered by suggestions, the effect
Plymouth Man Is Injured
Chester Martin. 23. of 2^4\\o witness the beaUfication ofj Attacking the Republi- - - . .iD«~.t tvT cans as "the party of big-
'Little Guy' Not Helped By Ike, Stevenson Says
SPRINGFIELD, Ma^s. (IP)—Adiai E. Steven.son de¬ clared last night that President Eisenhower has ex¬ erted "too little leadership to help 'the little guy' " in
economy.
Vine St., Plymouth, was admit¬
ted to Nanticoke Hospital last night at 11:30 with a severe laceration of the scalp, the re¬ sult of an auto accident at the Mocanaqua-Shickshinny Bridge.
Cari Provicki. 218 Vina St., Plymouth, driver of the car, was treated for lacerations of thei Vienna knee and released.
According to State Police, the car failed to negotiate a sharp curve at the bridge and went
Pope Innocent XI
He becomes the ninth Pontiff beatified but not yet canonized.
nes s," the Democratic
Heavy Fog
It was due to an appeal bv Pope I presidential candidate con-j| fcj,^^^,*,^ —
- tended the GOP is leading the|in rOCOIlOS
Innocent XI that the nations of Europe undertook a holy war against the Turks wlio had in¬ vaded the Balkan states and were threatening (he city of
Valley Scenes
down the embankment.
or-O/d Youth Robs Another \^!^[[odelphia Police Station
compass in his
JJ^DELPHIA, (IP)—A 15-
, °^ «rrested on a burglary
2'» beat and robbed an-
>«terd'ay""'^ *° ^ questioned
i^iv Am» / '" • center- Patrolman Philip Bet/, aaid
¦rly veS; .1*" ^^'^y *'ore he heard a ,cuffle in the room
Imin '^ morning by a and found Days beating the
"•crash ^*,'* investigated other boy. The younger boy
*«n said ?: *'¦"• '"'e patrol- told the policeman Days had
KWtet knl, ^°^^^- ^^'^ 'o"'' robbed him of several cenU
""ves. three hunting and a wrist watch.
knives and pockets.
Days was taken to the llth and Winter Sts. Police station and held in a detention room to await questioning with • 14-year-old boy picked up for violating the curfew.
North End youngster, who braved a barrage of po»teri- or-aimed needle* during re¬ cent illnest, going to Kirby Health Center for polio »hot And stunning staff by remov¬ ing trousers instead of roll¬ ing up sleeve.
Yaung wife, mincing no words at home as she repri- viands husband for failing to pick her up on Public Square, onlu to be reminded that she had taken ear to work that day.
Member of so-called "Bot¬ tle Ganjj" switching from Adiai pin to Ike campaign button as he spotted City Hall »fficial and movsd in for a sueetufui touch.
He was expected to begin re-jof which would be greatly to oeiving the stream of diplomats weaken our defenses ... we and party visitors, including must not by weakness invite an- groups from Italy and Bulgaria,lother war" tomorrow. ( Mr. Eisenhower expressed
c„ii«i Pni»« I'hese views in a 1,200-word
SoHd Position 'statement issued by the White
Diplomats believed that the House. It was one of the sharp- w...,, ........J ^v.-.-v...'^?"^^'"^"'^^ had further solidified,est attacks he has made yet on
faces a "crucial test" in han-'J'*° '" h's independent stand.Democratic presidential candi- dling the Suez Canal dispute ir,:'"'" Jugoslavia s right to a 'sep-,date Stevenson, a way that will insure "justice"!*'"*'e road to socialism. i Before issuing the statement,
as well as peace. j An outcast by Stalinist stand-Mr. Eisenhower conferred at the
He told « Williams Colleee I'''^''' *he rest of the Communist|White House with Vice Presi- convocation that there has been'^"'"''^ has warmed up «n him to dent Richard M. Nixon on the "strong worid-wide sentiment^!?* ^'P^ '^here yesterday the progress of the GOP campaign, against using force" to settle the;"""P"'«n «°\l'^T''!l' '" Buda-: Nixon who retumed eariier last Suez crisis but he warned that,P?*' «h.umed the bodies of four:week from a .?2-state campaign those who are concerned aboutJh'Jfh officials executed as 'Tito-itour, wil leave again this week
,,-.." ._ io.in ._j ..I to yjsit ]4 more states.
Call Draft Obsolete
Stevenson told a Minneapolis, Minn., audience Sept. 29 that with more effective modem weapons "we may very well find that some time in the not
peace ought to be. equally con-!i*ti''in^l349'ind gave them re
cerned about justice" for userj nations.
burial with full honors.
Charges Hostility iEisonhowers Give
"Is it just, or even tolerable,; ,
that great nations . . , whoseiTo United Campaign
economies depend upon the use; WASHINGTON |
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