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^9^rk^tar^i£|ls Stunning Derby Upset—Barons Lose A Paper For The Home .SUNDAY INDEPENDENT RAIN, COOL Monday: Cloudy, eool. Highest today 48 to 54. 47TH YEAR - NO. 27 - 70 PAGES Mmltcr AaAit BaroM af CtroalatioiM D.f.. M4 len. I <r Bom- I (nr Th« Oiir «ha Grn. Irmr Th. M. UCT MlhU irhll* Honn ^igston's Duplan Mill ^eems Lost $5 Million Payroll; No Headway Made In Saturday Meeting Of Labor-Management :^ ttm. Uiir- tln » kot. The prr- I «•• w«r» t 1«. 1/3** of the Duplan Corporation U on* of the leading Industries in tbis lecition of the state loomed laat night when latest efforts to tnd the seven-week atrike appar¬ ently had failed. Top company and union reipre- sentatives, following an all-day conference at Hotel Sterling yea¬ terday, featured at time.'t with a bitter exchange of words, adjourn¬ ed without having made any head- j»y. ^ Seventy-five percent of fhe Dup¬ lan rtperationa already havo moved to the South. 10 Million Pa}Toll Involved In tlie controversy l.i • pay roll of approximately $.'i",0O0- 000, with many community hene- flts, such as the outlay of ap¬ proximately $70,000 a year for the purrha,se of coal. In 194«. the Kingston mill alone spent more than $100,000 for power, water and taxes from other large expendl- In 1M«, the pay roll at the Haileton mil] was over $8,000,000. Over $250,000 was spent In Harlrton alono for supplies and squipmont that year. That mill KARRTtsmmri n i, # «. has been closed. HARRISBURG—Backers of the Ths Berwtck and Nanticoke f'*'* "^^' ^ are rallying around plants contributed another $5,000,-ij*^' ."'""'' f J^'^'i'l Majority 000 pav roll In the same year, with !i;*»f?'„Al^"t W. Johnson who Klnpon ooming In with nearly "'*«^' What else Is there?" as t-ftS^nno °"* '"'"^* effort was prepared to *^The Nanticoke plant al-o has ""i °^" ^' I'vy. been closed and tho building sold. M»tt«r of Wa«e« Ths nrsMUit rflanut^ wKI^-h «NHnsi WILKES-BARRE, PA., SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1953 Wins ?»*««•• ft«TTir« PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS Soatheast Asia in Peril Sales Tox Backers Ask: Whai Else Is There? Say Defeat Means Letting Mess Simmer For Two More Years I They insisted there was no iother way out unless the stymied JLegisIature slapped on another ... fi_»- ; hodge-podge oi add* and onds" «dlng tho careers ofthe «'"*»-jtaxes and left the accumulating, ten snd Berwick mills, concerasj^^, ^^ ,,^^^^ ,^^ ^^^ ^^^.^1 FINE TO ANALYZE STATE FINANCES ATTAX waires. The dispute between Duplan and'^.^ n««.~.«.« ttt employees really began in New:*)!"*" "''¦* Umrlaiid state* In July of last, ^"*^'^* '"" May Not Mention Sales Levy Mixup At Princeton Meeting Fear Attack on Siam Next As Red Soldiers Mass Plan ot Conquest; Final Laos Attack Appears Imminent SINGAPORE—The Communists are massing on the northern, southern and eastern borders of Siam (Thai¬ land), placing Southeast Asia in the deadliest danger it has faced since World War II, it was reported yesterday. Siam is considered almost certain to be the next target of the Red armies now sweeping across Laos. Informed sources say the Reds want to establish a Burmese- Siamese-Indo'Chinese puppet state as a springboard for the eventual conquest of all of strategic Southeast Asia- viewed In this light, the Laos capital of Luang Prabang is a secondary "prestige" target for forcea whose primary aim is to i establish an unbroken supply lino from Red China through Siam ! tnto Burma—and probably south into lHalaya as well. \ Slam has relatively few native Refuses to Pose With Sen. McCarthy IiOUraVTLi,E, Ky.—Gk>v. Law. ronco Wetherby, host for Ken¬ tucky at tho I>erby yetterday, refused to pose for photograph¬ ers with Wisconsin's Senator Joseph McCarthy. Wetherby, when asked to join with McCarthy for a picture, •aid "I'm not for Joe. I dont know whero ho Is and wouldn't bo caught photographed with him." Communists, but about 70,000 Red re!fug«es from Indo-Chlna have been squatting In ths northern part of the country for years. A Communist "army liaison com¬ mittee" was set up three years ago In Burma, five miles from Siam'« eastern frontier. Tho Siamese and Malayan gov¬ ernments announced that the Reds also havo pushed from Malaya across the southern Siamese bor¬ der to establish large camps aev¬ eral miles inside Siam. "Tho military picturo 1« deadly serious," a top military source said. "This ts tho most serious threat to southeast Asia since the Ja/pancss defeat in 19^.'^ ¦mi years Help some feeling also' HARRISBURG — Pennsylva- rmr. After much discussioin ove- *^^^„l" ft\^^°'^''^°Tll; t '^""^'^ "'»'» ^^^V «*" question will be L e.«petition fr«n the .South. f'Zul^rf^f Z JS^ ^''°.^f"^^^^^ ^ " '*«-<»*y ^ ^°'- jW Kni^nd mill« and the Tex- '".•"»??" .*'^''t '-^ '.« ..Thlsium here May 7-8. with Gov. John ' tu. unions agreed to perTnitarbit-,*:'-^^-^'*^ J" '^^^^^^^^ ""S. Fine slated to analyse wtlon to settle the mntroversy. i^*, P'/i filnTthJ? H„,uf^«S i""*''• ""*"^''" P^'^''^' .. a result, wage, were reduced Xte^dlTi'm'An'^rr^ws'ha"^ ^,^' l^!:^,T'^'T'^^.J'' ."^^ gono too far Institute Inc.. Print^eton, Th.t w.. t»4i«n k. ...»rtf...».^ ^- J> *^'l tocuh attention on the thll^'any D^^rat' w^hT vo el ^'^ --"- '^o.^^' <" «".- for the sale, tax would be readi??f;?".".!^l^"^f ^.^rPJ^if! Laos King Won't Heo Though Attack Nears HANOI, Indo-Cbina—Attacking Communists brought up troop re-j Inforcements last night before Luang Prabang, royal capital of Laos, as threo governments tried vainly to persuade the king to fie*" the ancient city. 'While tho onemy vanguard was arrayed In an arc only 10 miies from tho nervously-awaiting city, tho morale of French defenders •oared with the airbomo arrival of artillery. France's top air force general, Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Le- cherea, arrived in Indo-Chlna toj organiza tho air .defenses before; tho Communist-beleaguered Lao- j tian capital. I French officers here predicted the first exchan«re of shots in thci -battle for the city waa Imminent, j U. S. Australian and French of-j (Continued on Pago A-10) Major Move Expected in Truce Talks BULLETIN TOKYO, Sunday — The ex¬ change of sick and wounded prisoners of the Korean War ended today uith truce talks bogged down over the probleni of choosing a neutral nation to handle Rod prr»<Miefa~vino re¬ fuse to go home. Big Jet Airllnet Overdue in India Witli 43 Aboard NEW DESLHI, India-A BritLihl The airliner was on its way to jet Comet airliner with 43 per- London from the British Asiatic sons aboard was 12 hours overdue ..„^ . ci„„.^„ last night on a flight from Cal- <»i?"y °' Singapore, cutta to New Delhi. The Calcutta-Delhi route Is Six minutes after the plane moat desert. The emergency land- took off from Calcutta, the pilot jng fields were built by the Royal radioed he waa climbiTig and "on .. p,,*.,^. ,<.„!«« »i,. ,.»., k„« f„„ t«u.k." The message was receiv- ^I'l^:^ t^TJ^'r.Tr.T '^ ed at 4:36 p.m. and nothing had been heard from the plane since that time. The plane carried 37 passengers, including two children, and a crew of six. Airline officials hoped the plane might have landed safely at one of the emergency airfields between Calcutta and New Delhi. The 500-mile-an hour Co.Tiets have a crew of seven and carry as many as 36 pa.ssengers. Their flight time from Calcutta to Delhi is normally two hours and 25 min¬ utes. No Americans were aboard the missing plane, according to BOAC officials. Family of Four Gone 5 Die as Crowded Plane Crashes ai Lock Haven \ LOCK HAVEN, Pa.—Five per-1 but rose oter the Susquehanna _sons, includinjg_a fajnily of_fo^iirJjFUyg^r_a^^ brushed the tree. ;w'cre burned to death when a;lt struck the roof of a barn on small two-seater airplane brushed ithe farm of Rockcy Kress after a tree top. exploded in the air and; exploding and plunged into the cra.shcd in flames on a meadow j meadow. shortly after taking off fromi The Lock Haven fire depart- the an hour, or ¦bout eight cents •(bout t3.20 a weok. Wim I Asked Hern As a matter of precedence, the with a sales tax for the fifth straight week. Fine's Stand Unoortain A apokeaman for tho group de¬ clined to state whether Pine !:^'1hS-i?n.^!nh.*5^ "-r-l- Will not even say .iTZ'L^'tZ'u.^^TdXZl ^. ?^nun h«^. rJrt orf!^ r'^ '" '*'¦'"¦• *"»'°"»»' 'his at-.he has indicated previoiisly that! v2 r^fJn^ i^^rJrn^n, n»r^e'l'"'*'' '« ""'"ibuted in part to „e would not intervene in a tax' Now England agreement. ^"^'"K the fact that he realizes his sup-lquestion again. i tuso cut was expected to apply out al the Democratic caucus. It Un. However, the settlement In ^aa Insisted that some Demo- Sew England was made by the ^rats feel Andrews had exceeded CIO and when leaders of valley hig authority. pulled away from the CIO over| aU tho while, of course, Gov- iJectlon of officers, they re.,ernor Fine has refused to lift a 3INDIGTMENT' 'Fatally Defective'; Doubts ottier Counts Can Form Jury Issue T , By RITHERFORO M. P0.4TS . ___ „ __ _.,.„.. L'nited Press Staff Correspondent Lock Haven Municipal Airport on ment rushed to the .scpne.\but the TOKYO. Sundaj-A 48-hour re- Saturday. |five victims wore burned to death Icess in the Korean truce talks The victim? Included the pilot, almost in.siantly. called by the Conimunincs was Richard F. .Smart, 28,-tgn Hood | Plane Overloaded believed today to foreshadow a street, Lock Haven; Don Larimer, Police said Mrs. Larimer was major enemy move, but Heiping 2ti. PJeasaiU Gap, Pa.: Larimer's seated on the front seat with the sadio atr(>ss*'d the unyielding na- wife, Genevieve. 28. and their two, pilot, while her husband and the ture of Rod demands. 'small children, Barry, 3, and Kem, two youngsters were in the rear The Communist broadcast said 18-months. seat. In addition, the fueled plare the "most essential' step In the Owned by Minister was loaded with the baggage of Communist plan for settling the State Police said Smart had bor-, the Baptist minister, who planned .'deadlocking prisoners of war issue: "-owed the single-engine planei lis Allied agreement to remove'from his uncle, the Rev. Curtj UN Airmen Blast Enemy Airstrip, Supply Centers jfrom Korea all prisoners who do: Wetzel^ Lock_Haven, known as|New York state to take off Sunday to conduct services in Pottstown, Pa., and in It was reported unofficially that the Civil Aeronautics Administra¬ tion. State Police and Clinton county coroner, Mrs. Doris Kis- WASHINGTON. — Federal|By ROBERT VERMUXIOX th. bitter battle for control here port might do more harm thanj About 250 delegates from busi¬ ness, banking and legal groups, as ., , well as state officials and mem- , the manner in which the Treasure ^lfJ^'l:^f1^1'''''f*T Um. aight, those familiar with that he exerted for the income ^\^^ ^ •^^'"'^ ">• «« '^'^^ *• toxttlo Industry in Wyoming tax two years ago backfired, he '"" , ^ , ^ .. y«B«y wero powilmlstic as to the v^ould aroUM old enmities tf he! ^<»<*' P°*"* o* *• <U»cu«8lono between the CIO and the AFL the gooj. looal leaders •ho switched to the g,,,^ Still Angrv AFL said there would be no cut jt i^ reasoned' as ta wages. not wish to return home. f'The Flying Evangelist." to take Tbe view is directly opposed to'"!» 'fiends on a short ride, that of the United Nations and ^oth Larimer and Smart were emphasized the great rift that has,f"^':'^^ at Rockview State Peni-1 grown during the seven days of tentiary at Bellefonte. Pa. sell were investigating the pos- fruitless talks at Panmunjom. The Witnesses said the plane seemed js^Uity that the .small plane, a District Judge Luther W. Young-j United Press Staff Correspondent broadcast came as Red refusal '<> ^^"^^ trouble on the take-off "Piper Pacer, was overloaded. dahl yesterday dismissed four of| TOKYO Sunday-A Communist'"* return 375 additional .sick and --——•^———-—^^———-—-———^—-——^————————————— government's seven perjury; battalion 'hit Allied positions on mounded Allied prisoners in &P- Mg% m£^^^ ^ t'^ ^^.mm.^ O^^Im the main line of resistance along ?'"«"' violation of the oxcha.igeflii MQfQ l3| S WOITIG OuCK the Western Korean front earlyiaK'eement cast new doubts on"* ¦r.w.w -^» «# ww>>-«» mmw.'m today, but waj hurled back after t^^'r'»l""''ity in hoping to end — BJ^mAL U^m^^m^ Omlm.^Bmm' heavy hand-to-hand fighting Inithe war FrOITI NOrtll KOfeOII rriSOnS Mur* Leadors of the lndu«tr>'.took a stand for tho aales tax ,^ to bo oaught In a w*b of un-1 ^^^ i<roun«tance^ | However, there is a feeling that will be tho reiport of Flno's Tax Study OamRiittce, headed by Dr. Alfred G. Buehler, who will sum Avwat* Eunlngo ^ | ono or two of the House'GOP |uP tho ctate's tlac*i hoadwsho. Fof InManoo, tbe average w«ok-'m(wnbir«"who"'havrstTOd'against WljnHmi*! ob Pago A-10) I (Continued on Pago A-10) 36 UMAW Indictments Bring Plea for PoUce The Tax In^tttuU. a natton-wlde organiaatlon ooRi'Posed of tax ex- pert« and inteoresited Indlvlduala and organizationa. Is headiod by Herbert M Kelton, preaident trf the U S. Rubber Co. j Broad Baae Emphasis j Special emphasis will be placed; on the broad-base taxes includ-' T wvniT.,^..,^*. _ ing the sales and income levies— LEXENGTON, Ky. - Kentucky .Vapier, BJdgar M Reynolds,; durn- the meetin? with •» special state police officials jTstcrday Charles Vermillion and Charlie analysia of the school financing ¦tudled requests that more troop-iBaker. 'problem scheduled •r« be assigned to Clay and I^sliei Specifically the union officials counties, after a federal grand are accused of disregarding wL*!"// ''if^T'^ ^ 'ir/'^ Mine, civil rights of seven miners on,^-^ y-^i^^ ^ ,^, ,„vitations to workers Union officials on Feb. 21, 1952. when they threw up! ., . ,, _,.lli„_, eh&rges of forcing miners in the.picket lines on State Highway goiattena tne meetings. •res to join the union. [near Hvden, in Leslie county, andi The M union officials were i„J^eK«<l'y tried to force non-union| NATIONALISTS MURDER T:i^V ^^r-'^h -Hoirnci"'" -"• "^'"*''-'''' deputy mayor of tun w.-=;^n;^r^nrr:^:.---^^-rrr^--ioN eve of elections the trencheo. Front diapatche* said tho at¬ tack occurred on posit,iona bo- tweeri tho Hook and Llttlo Gibral¬ tar on the western front Tho Rod battalion bulled Its way into the UN pooltlons after Amer¬ ican and Australian planes had blla»tod key targets In North Ko¬ rea on Saturday. Earlier yesterday The Communi.sts at the Satur¬ day session asked for a recess un- till 11 a. m. Monday. They gave; I By GLKNN STACKMOL8ii Ihome within the next few days. no%TOlInation'"bTt%bsel^"ers said'^'"'**^ **"** Staff Correspondent A group of 22. including som; S^eTegotiltor. und^bCdly h^^^ the governments seven charges against Owen Lattlmore on grounds they are unconstltu tional. Youngdahl ruled that the firat oount of the seven-count Indict¬ ment — charging that Lattlmore was a promoter of Communism and Communist Interests — vio¬ lated the Sixth Amendment of the Con«tltutlon and la In "conflict with tho First Amendment Th* Judge ruled that tho Far Kast oxpert and Johns Hopkins University professor may bo tried on the other three counts. The first count of the indict¬ ment handed down by a federal grand jury last December charged Lattlmore lied when he told the' i„c .^^jitinuoi^u; u.i«r»«,».cv. »uui ,,.. ,„«,,„„ „„;„. uio.,!, .„ ,-o.v.ni,.3 Senate Internal Security Subcom-simultaneous attacks against po-ilf.' ^^3.^° "! i .._? !."° !hioisy confusion tiiat marked thei ito check further moves with Pei- ..- „...,.. .„..,„. ...„,.. „ ^^ Calif. —Forty more men came "influenced by Communist propa- ping before a major step can be"*'''* Saturday f.-iom the Comma- ganda." arrived secretly Friday. taken. "'*t prison camps of North Korea. Most were taken to Valley For,'»e The Communists demand ths^t ,^^''^^ZV.\^ ^.^.J^J^^..^ .^^ ^°T^^\''^^' Philadelphia for ^ illl-- «__. i- jjthoir homes or hospitals m the treatment. the Allies first agree to aend lU. S. and Puerto Rico. allied troopa killed or'wounded i'^al'^y prisoners out of Korea to|"'J|: , ,--,„.] .„ the third nlane more thanlOO Reds In sharp pa- » neutral nation. Then the Com-I^^^^^^™ ^reJdom AirlffT ^~' '^'"^'"- '^ref Lo7"that'nati:: it" ^i^ifrUrTokTo waT'Sra^d o"- The Communists imleashedfour^f£^t."P.?i^" ""ir;JJ'™„^':!derly, in .,harp contraM to the the POW.S . The Institute's spokesman sald| 'members of the General Assembly mittee last winter that he never sitions held by three Allied uniu.'^"" . ^;'"''^.^»"^ demand tnat a ,5^^^ f,; ^^ „„ Wednesday. was a Communist sympathizer or'The Reds hit the United Nations;"f"''^' "*''°" ''^ selected to han-| ^.^ ^^.^ ,^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^.^^^ promoter of Communist interests.|positions late at night, and were °'*'"^ ¦'*"*^>''=*»''*• Inot more than 200 persons on Youngdahl said this count, theihurled back before dawn. The' The Communists have namedihand when the double-decked C-, most controversial in the Indict- attacks were preceded by a thun- India, Pakistan. Indonesia and 97 landed from Hawaii at 8-071 **"*"* ***'* ^^ Nazis ment, is "fatally defective." derous artillery barrage. - Burma as neutral nations butj^ „ A corps spokesman said the have not nominated any for- ij, Good Spirits First man off the plane was CpJ. Tibor Rubin. Long Beach, Calif., a pri.soner for 30 months. Rubin, carrying a cane and walking with a slight limp, was greeted joyously by his .sister. Mrs. Irene Goldberg, and his brother Irwin, both of Long Beach, ganiie the "ounties in tucky. miner* in tlie two Ken- grand jury ments. TUNIS. Tunisia—A young Na- Defends Rights - --,_ -,^ ...- The Sixth Amendment guaran-Communists actually gained th? '"^Hy- tees that In criminal prosecutions, front-line trenches, but were; — the accused "shall enjoy the right!thrown back after "heavy" hand- to a speedy and public trial and;to-hand fighting. The Allied; to be informed of the nature and forces were tipped off on the at- cause of the accusation and to be;tack when a friendly patrol ran confronted with the witnesses into the Red force moving toward Little unman taking over against him." the UN line Thun^in,> afternoon at 5 :tS on Youngdahl said "there is serious Allied planes bla.sted several; \-orlh Pennstilrania avenue, to doubt" whether the three counts Red supply areas in Saturday's! slwv' them how to hack big on which Lattlmore may be tried air aqtion. ~ •¦ - — Valley Scene S southeastern Ken-, .p^^^^^ ^^^.p ^^^^ numerous re- tjonalist assassin killed the pro I ports of roadside ambushes, dyna- p^pnch deputy mayor of Tunis in Among those indicted were Tomimitings and shootings in the area a busy downtown street here, on .,j,an ultimately pass the teat of; U.S. Air Force B-26s and Sabre- n*ne.v, of Pikeville. Ky., an in- in recent years. The tvvo counties the eve of controversial French- . .. -. ... _ temational board member of the are virtually the only areas of the sponsored municipal elections JJ^lnn, and special organizers C Kentucky coal fielda that are not C. Conle.v, T. M. Fleming, Farmer "organized." ^ (banker Kills 2 Lawyers. Self: Blamed Men for Legal Troubles • miu,eijl;kviixe. <jh. a «nall-town banker yesterday mor- |*il.v wounded two lawyers hc Blanied for his maze of court tijcnibles and then, apparently, "¦IJod himself as one of his dying "«lnis tried to return the fire. Summoning a last effort as his '«* ebbed, Steven T. Bivins, 3S «««• A pistDl from his desk and lollowed the killer, Marlon Stem- ^<i^(: into a hallway. "obably a Suiride Thei^ vv.is a .shot, but Stpm- Chedly Kastally, 70-year-old municipal leader, newspaper di¬ rector and a close personal friend j of the Bey of Tunis, was killed! by two pistol bullets fired at pointi blank range. The accused killer waa arrested jin a hidden "arsenal" outside the w,. mm I city less than eight hours later nis K""^j^^j. pgj,^^ raided Nationalist materiality so as to present a jets, Australian Meteors and V.S.\ jury issue." But he said this must Marine Pantherjets cratered ani await the trial. I airstrip in battered Wonsan.j Orders Bill Filed wrecked two Red supply trains | Youngdahl also ordered the gov-, and 48 trucks, and smashed at; (Continued on Page A-10) ' (Continued on Page A-lOl bridge must have turned on himself, police said. Tliere was '^'¦^^ puwi-ir .o.v.«- ... a corner of the hall between him hideouts in the Arab quarter, and Bivins. Both men were found Police believe the murder was dying in the hall. part of a Nationalist terror cam- Less than five minutes earlier, paign to protest the entry of Tu- 65-year-old Stesnbrldge had ' ' - — ->'-•-'—•- .ui- —...-*«,¦, Dulles Says U.S. Aid To Be Speeded to Laos trailer truek into building. Fearless cop in valley town putting jMirking ticket on ,his own father'.-) ear—then dropping nickle in meter to avoid need of puttinri ticket on $hiny Cadillac. Doff which obviously had made off with a fistherman'^ prize, taking better care of it as he went doivn ttreet with 18-inch trout—convoyed by two other dogs. Twenty-eight of the men re¬ leased in the exchange of sick and wounded with the Reds were walking and appeared In good spirits. Twelve were on stretchers. Asked by radio men at the foot of the ramp if they wished to say anything, most had the same; reply: "It's sure great to be back." Their arrival brought to 98 the number of leleased prisoners re¬ turned. Fifty-one are .still in The three were former residents of Hungary and were imprisoned by the Nazis for l.'S months at the Manthausen Co^icentrat ion C3amp, Austria, during World War n. Men On stretchers apijcared tired. Some were barely able to speak into radio microphones. (Others just shook their heads when asked to speak. All were hustled aboard ambu¬ lances for the half-mile trip to Travis base ho.spital. After pro¬ cessing, they will be furnished military or civilian transportation Tokyo but are expected to start'to their homes or hospitflls. Former Pow Says Some Pilots Fiqhiing in MIG-IS Were Blond '» Today's Issue ?Wt"«r,i A-10 ^';;'-i'' , B_i I'llitoriol B s *;eature faio'ZZZZ'.'. B-7 tlassified B—U Ciocia 1 J, , , Television .::zz:z.::z o-u fe.::::::z:::.^ the killed another lawyer, Marion Ennis, ,15, in an office next door. Stembridge. 66-year-old owner of a small iMink and a grocery store, had been in court off and on for four years in conne<'tion with a manslaughter caae and his income tax. Only last .week he was convicted in federal court at Macon of attempting to bribe two Internal Rev&nut Dept, men. Four Shots Fatal About 10:30 a. m yesterday Ennta, 35, a World War H veteran who had como back to his hotne town to praictice law. Ennis him¬ self had Juat come to work and (Continued on P»«« A-10) nlslan candidates in this country's first municipal elections starting today, Kastally was a candidate in the French-backed election. VATICAN AND IRAN RESUME RELATIONS VATICAN CITY— The Vatican has announced tho estab!islmnent of diplomatic relations between! the Holy See and Iran, .„.wu, ,„ „. „. . This rahKd to 46 the numbor of Stembridsre entered the office of oountriej which send offlclal re- TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE,!cause none has been shot outside ____^ CJalif.—^A former prisoner of the Red territory. Communists in Korea yesterday! Treffery said that Allied bomb- PAL OF LUCIANO HEADS «i1 ^e saw three • blond- MIG-IS jng ^aids on the nearby Yalu I ni_ Wl i_uv/iniiiu iii_nww pjjots after they were shot down Riv-r rtamm «r»r» "hi» rfav." in WASHrN<yiK)N - The United Indo-China But it is known that| xq jaiI FOR GAMBLING and that he and his buddies be-m,' j, ° „f thrnrlsonerr Statea yetorday announced tt Islatoout two weeks ago France re-, ' " J , L^J!"" ,'^7°'-'^ lieved they were Russians. i"'!,"!.^' °^ '*** prisoners, •peeding delivery of "critlcanyi quested additional American cargo BALLSTON SPA, NY.-Meyer Wendell H Trefferv Ter ,• ^'IL*'' ^^ •a"^' the men he- needed military Itecms" to forces; plane, to ferry ammunition, light Ifn^i^y. big-time gambling crony ^T^ _ ^„n -aid he w7s held '""t^i.^lf ''*«™» °f P'""r» "^/"t defending Laoo from Oommunlstl weapons and some troops to Laos. I of former vice lord Cliarles ^J^'''^V°""; ?«°"« *•« "•¦'° an Allied paratroop attack to free Viet Minh attack. Dulles also disclosed that the ^^ucky) Luciano and rackets^'^j* R™fr "„ northwest Kore^ Secretary of State John Foater U. S Mutual Security mission in king Frank Costello^ wa^ /i"'"'^ and hfd rri^^«"de seTt for bat Dulles revealed the aotion in a Laos is arranging to furnish »2,500 and sentenced to three|na h^'Ll" f™-'//„ ^1 J!,, lot," he said. "When we saw all Statement denouncing the Com-,'funds and supplies' to eare for months in jail today for gambling;'-«^ muniet attack as "aggression" and'refugee victims of tht Viet Minh I operations in plush Saratoga saying tho United Statee views It {onslaught. "We thought about i>aratroops a former vice lord Clmrles "-y^"'^- ^onn., said he was _ _ ^__ Dulles also disclosed" that the *Lucity> Luciano and rackets «'« '^'"P "L *=^!."«'?."« "S-'.^^fthe prisoners. U. S Mutual Security mission in »«'n^ I^>-ank Costello. was ^'^'^^^ ZI^ ¦ S2.500 and sentenoert to thr^e ^nO -nH '','hr*r"nn^.^fnL?s" 'mSn' those planes we thought that was Viet Minh! operations in plush Saratoga »"f the Communists Russian- ^^^ ^^ ^^^,^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^.^^ Springs, °""t .Mi^T-io ]ets, Ibombing in the distance. built MIG-15 jets with "grave concern." ; Dulles said the efforts of; The 50-year-oid Lanskj-. once PiJot» Walked Through 'd-H h« w h t h-ii It waa understood, although notiFrench and native forces to de-j described as a director of Murder, Seven Red nilots he sairt wbIW»,i ^^^ ^ I , spelled out by Dulles, that a num-,fend Laos were "an integral part|Inc.. also receivod a five-year sus-^through'':hVta''mp'ar'di7f:rent hea''d°Vou":houl*T'h:r'.7enX presontatives to the Vatican. Tho Holy See will oetabllah an apostolic inter-nunciature at Te¬ hran. ITio Iranian g<yvernment will Mt up a ie««ticn horei. ber of cargo planes would be:of the atruggle of the entire free rushed to Indo-CJhtna from Japani world against enslavement and and possibly the Philippine*.! are recognized as such here." Planea seem to be the most ur-j The American decision reflects gently needed "military Items." tiio concern with which the ad- Dulles did not specify what mill- ministration regards the attack tary euppllee wero being aent to there aa a Oimmunifft threat to all tho French and Laoo foroea In of Southeast Aala. _ the pended sentence and was put on time's after chey bailed out of Reds heading for the hills" prolvation for three years. .MIGs crippled in dog fights with He said he and his buddies Moses Polakoff. Lansky's law- Sabres. cheered when Sabres downed yer who gained fame aa Luciano's Four were Chinese or Korean, MIGs. TTjis made their Chinese attorney, said his client was con- he said, and the other three were guards angr>-, he said, and they nected with the high-brow Ar-| blonds. would hustle the prisoners into rowhead night spot for only; There never lias been positive buildings and lock them up until "three wneeka" in 1fl47 Identification of MIG pilots be- fighting -vas over. 1
Object Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 47 |
Issue | 27 |
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 | 1953-05-03 |
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 | 05 |
Day | 03 |
Year | 1953 |
Description
Title | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Masthead | Wilkes-Barre Sunday Independent |
Volume | 47 |
Issue | 27 |
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 | 1953-05-03 |
Date Digital | 2011-01-06 |
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 35367 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 |
^9^rk^tar^i£|ls Stunning Derby Upset—Barons Lose
A Paper For The Home
.SUNDAY INDEPENDENT
RAIN, COOL
Monday: Cloudy, eool. Highest today 48 to 54.
47TH YEAR - NO. 27 - 70 PAGES
Mmltcr AaAit BaroM af CtroalatioiM
D.f..
M4
len.
I |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19530503_001.tif |
Month | 05 |
Day | 03 |
Year | 1953 |
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