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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 2

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ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1959 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 2LA Waiting in Havana for Revolt Leaders HOODLUMS FLEE MIKOYAN ON WAY us raooNi IWWW- YORK CITY FROM CUBA, ARE jTO U.S., HOPES TO PiflDED VITAL DATA DESPITE rTW POUCED ROPPED TIN U.S. SEE PRESIDENT SOUGH FALLING SHORT Havana Gambling 'Let Us All Co-operate for Soviet Teamster Officer Bows to Threat of Losing $8500 a Year Civil Service Post. Bosses Get Out in Three Planes to Escape Wrath of Mobs.

American Officials Re Deputy Premier Says in Copenhagen. fuse to Classify Three Probes by Air Force J'X a'qd One by Army as Failures. COPENHAGEN, Jan. 3 (UPD Soviet Deputy Premier An-astas Mikoyan arrived here today en route to the United States and said, "I certainly hope to see President Eisenhower during my stay in Wash NEW YORK, Jan. (UPD Police authorities and federal agents in several cities were on the lookout today for Havana gamblers and hoodlums who fled to the United States in three chartered planes.

The underworld figures left Havana Thursday afternoon for Associated Prew Wlrephoto. VERA WILSON niv Vnrk. hut they were ie- WOMAN CAUGHT TRYING SECOND BANK ROBBERY Auoclited Prtl Wlrephoto. Air of expectancy marks crowd which gathered in park in downtown Havana last night in hopes of seeing Fidel Castro and other leaders of the Cuban revolution. Cuban Revolt WASHINGTON, Jan.

3 (AP) No; American rocket has reached the moon, but officials refuse to classify all four TJnitec) States attempts as TVd probes streaked a fair dlstan'ce toward the moon and, officials say, collected valuable Information about the radiation arourrd the earth. This radiation-; could kill man. Officials do not want to downgrade the job done by the probes In finding out how far into space the radiation bands streach. Until early today, when the Hussion rocket sped toward the moon'. the American probes held the record for space distance.

It 'is possible that the Rus-liians- liave attempted unsuccess ington." "Let us all co-operate for peace," he said. "Let us negotiate." Mikoyan was welcomed by Danish Foreign Minister Jens Otto Krag and other Danish government officials, who escorted him to a private' luncheon with Premier Hansen. Mikoyan, who was seen off at Moscow airport by Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and Vice Foreign Ministers V. Kuz-i. nnrl Patolichcv, ar Soviet Moon Rocket Releases Sodium Cloud as Tail Light' NEW YORK, Jan.

3 (AP) A middle-aged widow, who robbed a mldtown bank of $3000 a month ago, tried it again yesterday at another bank, a block away. This time she was seized as she walked out with $1190. She said she had lost the original loot when she dropped ported to have landed in Jacksonville, after learning that New York police were alerted to meet them. Police sources here said they were believed to have scattered to Miami, New Orleans, Las Vegas and other cities. Among those known to have fled from the wrath of Havana mobs, which wrecked Batista-controlled gambling casinos after the Cuban dictator fell, were: Meyer Lansky, head of the Cuban gambling syndicate, who had a contract with Batista to oversee operations of hotel casinos catering to American tourists and to split profits with Batista and his cohorts.

Rebel leader Fidel Castro promised to outlaw the casinos. NEW YORK, Jan. 3 (AP A Teamsters officer has agreed to give up his campaign to unionize New York's 24,000 policemen under the threat of losing his $8500-a-year city job. Henry Felnstein, president of Local 237 of James R. Hoffa's Teamsters Union, also is transportation superintendent in the office of Manhattan Borough President Hulan E.

Jack. Jack and Mayor Robert Wagner yesterday told Fein-stein to abandon his drive or face department trial on charges of violating city administration policy and acting contrary to the public interest. A department trial would be tantamount to his losing his city post. To Abandon Efforts. Last night Felnstein announced he would abandon efforts to organize the police, but added: "The real Issue in this controversy is not Henry Feinstcin.

The real issue is whether the police are getting a square deal. "They are not and, as time goes on, the mayor will recognize it." Felnstein continued: "I tell the mayor in all good friendship if he doesn't take action now to reform the Kennedy (Police Commissioner Stephen P. Kennedy) labor policies, there will be a union ultimately in the police department to fight for the rights of all policemen and policewomen." Earlier this week, Felnstein By FRANK E. CAREY WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (AP) Continued From Page One.

rebel tanks and diehard Batista followers accompanied the occupation of Havana by Castro followers yesterday. Forty to 50 men were believed to have been killed. Estimates of the wounded ran to 450. Gunfire was heard in various sections of Havana during the night. Bands of armed rebel youths roamed the capital Russia's moon-bound rocket carried a special taillight a sky at twilight revealed a yellow air glow.

It was believed this was due to sodium in the atmosphere catching the light of the sun. But no one knew for sure. The Air Force experiment confirmed the theory. As for other scientific instrumentation of their rocket, the Russians say it has equip sodium cloud that gave it the hunting enemies of Castro and claiming control of sections of this city of 1,250.000 persons. ment for doing these things: Ascertaining the magnetic appearance of an artificial comet.

The Idea, the Russians ex-plancd, was to allow a visible cloud which could be observed and photographed as their experimental vehicle headed through space. At the distance of the moon the satellite itself would not be visible froln the earth. The Russians reported they fully to hit the moon on other occasions. These failures, if tlicy Occurred, have not been announced. Air Force Attempts.

The 'United Slates Air Force times to hit the ioon." on Auk. 17, it made the first attempt. Just 77 seconds-after launching, the rocket The 'second attempt, on Oct. II, aas far more successful. The Air Force launched Pioneer field of the moon, studying the intensity of cosmic rays outside the earth's magnetic fields, registering photons (units of light) in cosmic radiation, discovering the radioactivity of the moon, studying the distri rived aboard a Soviet Aeroflot TU-104 jetliner.

Mikoyan Said to Be Interested In Seeing Nixon. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (AP) Russia's Anastas Mikoyan is reported interested in talking over foreign policy problems with Vice President Richard M. Nixon. It is highly likely that Nixon will agree to meet the Kremlin trouble shooter some time in his four- or five-day stay In Washington.

As for a meeting with President Eisenhower, the White House has made no move yet to arrange it, mainly because Mikoyan's visited is billed as "Informal." Mikoyan, accompanied by his son and five aids, is to arrive Sunday morning in New York for a visit which includes stops a paper bag full of cash on the sidewalk and was afraid to retrieve it. In both cases, the woman showed tellers a glass of colorless liquid, then shoved through notes describing it as acid and threatening to throw it in their faces. The liquid, It turned out, was plain water. The woman was Identified as Vera Wilson, 87, slender and graying. Although she said she was homeless, she was fairly well dressed and had an air of dignity.

She did not bear out the original description in the first robbery of a "little old lady." Her only explanation for her forays was that she needed money to live. The first bank robbed was the First National City. Yesterday's robbery attempt was directed against the Industrial Bank of Commerce. A band of 600 of Castro's top fighting men arrived in Havana before dawn from Las Villas province. They were led by Ernesto Guervara, an Argentine medical doctor who as one of Castro's top lieutenants was a commander in the crucial battle of Santa Clara.

Although a general strike called by the rebels until Ur-rutia takes over is only 48 hours old, food supplies already are low. Some groceries were broken Into and looted during the night in central Havana. Police were rushed to the had cut loose the sodium cloud In the early morning hours and that it had been photographed bution of heavy nuclei (such as nuclei of iron) in cosmic radiation, studying the gas components of interplanetary matter, studying corpuscular solar radiation and studying meteoric particles. Santo Trafficante, alias Louis Santos, operator of the swank Sans Souci gambling resort in Havana as well as the casinos of the Commidoro and Capri hotels. He is wanted in New York for questioning in the 1957 barber shop killing of rackets overlord Albert Anas-tasia, who was reported to have tried to muscle into the rich Cuban gambling preserve.

Trafficante attended the 1957 underworld convention in Apa-lachin, N.Y., reportedly called to carve up Anastasia's empire. Joseph Silesi, alias Joe Rivers, veteran gambler and syndicate strongman, also wanted for questioning in the unsolved Anastasia murder. Charles (the Blade) Tourlne, another top figure in the gambling world. These men and their associates were reported to have left Havana so quickly that they left everything behind ex I. which moved 71.JUO miles Into space, still the American record, and then turned back to crth.

It burned in the atmosphere, Tws reasons were given for Plonoer I reaching no more than one-third the distance to the moon; There may not have announced that teamsters would picket headquarters and other American scientists say an such experiments have either scenes to break ud raids. police installations. hcen sufficient rocket thrust (In Detroit, Hoffa confirmed been tried or actually done in flights of the space probes Pioneer I and III and other that plans to win New York policemen over to the Teamsters have been "temporarily dropped." He told United Press from the earth, although baa weather obscured It over the Moscow area. There was no Immediate word whether the reported experiment would be repeated or whether it was a one-shot affair. American scientists said the United States Air Force had done a similar thing in rocket experiments, though at an altitude of only about 60 miles.

In the American experiments, gaseous sodium was ejected from a rocket at twilight, and. catching the light of the alrcady-sct sun, it glowed "three times as bright as the moon." Scientists had noted that the at launching. And the Air Forcrniay have shot the probe Into a trajectory or curving space- that was higher than intended. The Air Force's final at advisers, two foreign office experts and a single security International that every policeman in the city "has been The New Tork FT.r.M Hwrlsl DKnuicli. i threatened by the mayor and American satellites.

But they say also that If the reported size of the Russian payload Is accurate, the Russians stand to get much greater detail on all such experiments than the United States would have achieved in its experiments even if all of them had accomplished their A move is afoot that may police officials with being fired bring about an informal meet- if he joined." ing between Mikoyan and in- will continue our policy fluential Senators. i that the Teamsters will wel- Unless the strike ends and there is a halt to the violence arising out of the political situation, bloody riots may develop. Two rebels were shot and killed last night near the Hilton Hotel and another near the University of Havana. Some Areas Barricaded. Some areas of the fashionable western part of the citv were blocked off and barricaded.

Most foreigners stayed inside hotels, where the food supplies began to run low. The strike shut down transportation except for a few taxicabs. Stores were closed, and it was impossible to buy many necessities. Havana's radio warned partisans against unnecessary shooting, and the rebels declared looters would be dealt with severely. Rebel patrols tried to keep order In the streets.

tempt, on Nov. 8, failed when Pioneer II covered only 7500 fell into the atmosphere. All three Air Force attempts were aimed at the moon. The Army's single attempt had a different goal. It wanted to shoo 'beyond the moon, sending tUe probe Into orbit around the sun.

Bui the Dee. 6 launching of the Army's Pioneer III had a history similar to the Air Force's Pioneer I. The Army probe- shot 66,654 miles into space- dropped back toward the best of four unsuccessful United States attempts to reach the moon. The 85-pound United States cept clothes, cash, wives and girl friends. Some of them were expected to filter into New York within a few weeks.

About 200 city detectives are keeping a sharp lookout on all transportation terminals and hoodlum hangouts in the hope of spotting them. "We're prepared to deal with any of them who come here," said Chief of Detectives James B. Leggett. 30-DAY OUTLOOK: BELOW NORMAL IN EAST THIRD OF U.S. Air Force moon probe Pioneer in 10 American cities.

The State Department and the Soviet Embassy have refused to be explicit about his schedule. This is partly due to security precautions aimed at guarding him from anti-Communist demonstrators. Mikoyan's arrival at New York's Idlewild Airport aboard a Scandinavian airliner will be guarded by more than 300 New York policemea and 12 State Department security agents. Hungarian groups have announced plans to picket Mikoyan when he visns the Park avenue headquarters of the Soviet United Nations delegation before his departure for Washington. Most authorities believe Mikoyan's Washington trip is connected with the Berlin crisis.

Mikoyan may have been given an assignment by Premier Khrushchev to make known the Kremlin's eagerness to settle the Berlin dispute. Mikoyan, a smooth-talking Armenian with a reputation as a trade expert, can be expected to plug the Kremlin's current campaign of more trade with the United States. If the weather Is good, Mikoyan is reported planning to Soviet Rocket Continued From Page One. graphs were not immediately made public. Initial Course Described.

The government gave its citizens a dramatic picture of the Senator Theodore Francis Green Rhode Island, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has received a favorable response to a letter he wrote the State Department stating his willingness to arrange informal talks if the State Department thought it advisable and "appropriate." Representative Walter Judd (Rep Minnesota, disclosed he had rejected an. invitation from Eric Johnston to a dinner party for Mikoyan on Monday evening. "Private negotiations with I soared 71.300 miles before er come anyone who solicits us and wants to Join the union," Hoffa said, denying that the action in New York killed a nation-wide effort by the Team-ters to organize policemen. Blast by Mitchell. have never had any program to organize police departments, period!" Hoffa said.) In Washington yesterday, Secretary of Labor James Mitchell accused the Teamsters union and Hoffa of "trying to coerce" policemen into joining the union.

Mitchell urged congressional approval of a proposed law which would limit organizational picketing. rors of launching angle and earth-end disintegrated In the propulsion speed caused it to fall back. Some of the Instruments reported to be aboard the Soviet rocket measured the earth's rocket's Initial course In home service broadcasts. Rebels kept pedestrians and automobiles from the Hotel Na- clonal, where many Americans were waiting for transportation home. tyrants actually in power in a country are one thing," Judd wired Johnston, a recent visitor wiieu juimsiuii, a recent visiior Four Americans.

William L. i i i to the soviet union. "Confer-IfifeatetValues for GreatetStlouis ring of respectability on them 1 INVENTORY and increasing their prestige I WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UPD The Weather Bureau's 30-day outlook for January: Temperatures to average below seasonal normals over the eastern third of the nation and also over the southern plains and gulf coast states. Above normal is indicated for the Northern Plains and areas west of the continental divide.

Precipitation, frequently In the form of snow and sleet, is expected to exceed normal Ryan, Bob Clark and James Kerlln of the Associated Press, and Robert Perez of New York, were seized by a rebel patrol while walking from the A.P. office to the Nacional. REDUCTION SALE yAtu in and power by acceptance into civilized society is quite an magnetic field as it receded, radioactivity, the gas components of Interplanetary matter and the intensity of cosmic rays. "A colossal amount of Information has been received," said Alexander Topchlev, vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. Data was being received by radio signals which were heard at many points throughout the world.

Radio technicians in the West who lacked the Soviet code to interpret the signals said they had a high-pitched tone of varying fre nwn in If Irvml other. harm to our PROGRESS AT ma country and humanity can come A rebel leader told them they could not be allowed to con travel by automobile to wasn-ington, escorted by police and State Department security guards. The five-hour automo tinue to the hotel because they were In danger of being shot by from entertaining here men whose hands drip with the blood of. millions already dead, still dying or being crushed in slave camps. Why not first give a dinner for martyrs of Hungary and invite Mikoyan?" "FURNITUHE CARPETIHO APPLIAHCES OUR LOCATION SAVES YOU MONEY over the southern half of the patrols from another rebel faction.

The rebel promised es cort to a nearby hotel for the night. I I 3 Fr Parklnl fnl tvtry Night bile trip has been tentatively arranged to give him chance to see the countryside, informants said. The trip to Washington will be made by train If the weather is bad. Mikoyan Is to be accompanied by his son, Sergo, about 35 years old, two Soviet trade atmosphere. Unlike the case of Pioneer however, the difficulties of the Armjr" probe were attributed largfly to shooting at too low an ajijle.

In addition, the fuel supnUt on the first rocket stage ended too soon, slowing the OJiicIals credit Pioneer I and Plorieer III with supplying the InfotnVation about the radiation Ttie Army Is expected to fire onejmore moon probe, possibly rarly next month. In addition, Space Committee lias urged that the Air Force be Ipermitted two more attempts to shoot the moon. T6b' prestige battle in the spait age also has centered on satellites. Hhe Satellite Record. Th- Russians, of course, piiDfd the jump by sending Snulnik 1 into space on Oct.

4, 195 They followed with Sputnik U' carrying a dog, on Nov. 3 arid with Sputnik III, a one and la half ton giant, last May 15. 'Al three Sputniks since havd burned up in the earth's atmosphere. TJjj-American satellites have beer; on the average, smaller, but they also have had a greater lite expectancy. Jan.

31. the United States launched Explorer 1, the first American earth satellite. The Navy followed on March 17 with Vanguard I. Other American satellites Include Explorer III launched March 26 and Explorer IV launched July 26. All but Explorer II still orbit about the earth.

The major American achieve Without specifying where It took off. the rocket was reported to have flashed eastward across the Soviet Union, climbed above the Hawaiian islands and moved away from the earth over the Pacific ocean. The rocket was sent up at "the second cosmic speed" of 11 2 kilometers (nearly seven miles) a second, the speed needed to break away from the earth's gravitation, the Russians said. A slower first cosmic speed only gets an object into orbit around the earth. "The rocket's Instrumentation functions normally," Tass said.

"According to the received data, the temperature and pressure inside the instrumentation ocntalner remains within the set limits." Those limits determine whether the instruments can work properly. Measuring the limits also helps determine whether a human being could withstand the strip. Thee was nothing to Indicate any living thing in the rocket. Apparatus Working. The Russians said their rocket's scientific apparatus was working normally.

It was reported over northeastern Brazil at 4 a.m. St. Louis time today. The radio said the temperature on the rocket's surface was 15 to 20 degrees centigrade (59 to 68 degrees fahrenheit). "The results of the processing of trajectory measurements nation lying east of the continental divide, and in the middle Atlantic states.

Subnormal amounts are in prospect over most of the remainder of the country. 20.000 Working at Redstone HUNTSVILLE, Jan. 3 (AP) Employment at Redstone arsenal, the Army's expanding rocket and guided missile center, rose to 20,000 in 1958, with a payroll of 1 KiliiMll, If.nJi I Olwut Prion In; Tim IB JCWiLERS 3t JANUARY SALE! priced btloiv 0 Si national at erase Three A.P. staff members, Larry Allen, George Kaufman and Harold Valentine, were taken from their office at gunpoint yesterday. Driven to a police station, they were later released.

Fight or 3 Hours. Yesterday's battle erupted as Castro followers streamed into the city from ail directions. Now in control of the army, the rebels poured its tanks and guns into the three-hour fight within sight of the presidential palace. Several hundred followers of Batista were apparently defeated, but there could be more fighting to come. The shooting around a business block lasted from shortly before noon until around 3 p.m.

Informed sources empha 1U. 1-3240 PL. 2-1414 i tim 5404 oraveli Avt, Stmm" 38 Hampton Vlllaq southern Las Villas Port Of mii Tm.iiii 9 Manufacture'! Cloil-Out I quency. The rocket was transmitting from three radio sets. One was sending on 19.997 and 19.995 megahertz, the second on 19.993 megahertz and the third on 183.6 megahertz.

A megahertz is a unit of electrical radio waves similar to the megacycle. Moscow morning newspapers carried only the bare facts about the rocket without comment or photographs. But radio broadcasts were full of comment and interviews with scientific leaders. One commentator said the Red rocket "Is beyond comparison" with United States efforts to reach the moon. This is the first major Soviet venture into space since last May when Sputnik III was sent aloft.

Since then the United States Air Force has made three unsuccessful attempts to orbit the moon and the United States Army failed in an effort with a 13-pound missile. The United States Army has been reductions! II VALUES fJPT- i I 1010 1 1 TO $1.00 4i I i I I YEAR END CLEARANCE Save 33Vt to 70 Cienfuegos. In Buenos Aires, Argentina, Informed sources said that several prominent members of Batista's government have taken refuge in the Argentine embassy in Havana. Hundreds of top Batista men fled abroad when the dictator left. Revere Electric Eye Reg.t139.SS $91.95 Bol8 9-8 fog.

S1 11.50 79.95 No. 5 Flash 1.12 59c 620 Film, Rer. 50c 3 lor 99c 75 t. F. Ilooculirt, ri(.

52.50, 22.77 Ban, 8mm Editor, ref. 44.95 S34.9S Saddle Brown Cidtet Bar, ri. 5.95 S2.77 HikonS-2, F1.4 Reg. 345 00 $150.00 First in style confirm that the rocket will pass close to the moon and will become a new planet of the HUNDRFOS OF OTHER ITEMS AT COST AND IELOVV COST ment was the Atlas, launched as a satellite last Dec. 18 and still in orbit.

This satellite, weighing between 8700 and sized no accurate count of casualties was possible because of the unsettled conditions. The Batista followers were a group of perhaps 200 to 300 men called the Tigers. They were a private army which followed Senator Rolando Masfer-rer, a pro Batistia publisher sun," the government announcement added. IMlili E5y E2AGLEE CLOTHES From Werner-Hilton The Moscow radio kept up GA. 1-6311 1005 OLIVE cast a Christmas message from PK' President Eisenhower.

At one Point salcL "In view of these devclop- expected to try again within the next few months. While the Russians gave no figure for the over-all weight of the multistage rocket, scientists said it must have been very large. Leslie Shepherd, chairman who has fled on his yacht. The II Plui fd. Vl I Mail ordfri arid 50c Mo.

orrf.n 2 Mir tx 3 FARM HOME EQUIP. CO. 3 Oltvi. Strfft Bd. p.

7 6516 11 I. Pre-lnventory SALE users speciauzea in Killing enemies of the Batista regime and plundering rebel sympa- 4410 Dlsoount on All WU3 10 Holiday Items of the British Interplanetary Society, estimated it at 250 NEW TIME TONIGHT ON CHANNEL tons. "By using bigger final stage they are able to incorporate more control, guidance and navigational equipment," he said. "It follows that the more equipment of this kind being used, the greater the possibility of success." The Russians also did not say how many rocket stages were involved in the launching. tnizcrs.

Santa Clara Losses. Elsewhere in Cuba, the rebels said In a broadcast from Santa Clara that they lost only five killed in the savage fighting for tbat capital of Las Villas province last week. The broadcast said 13 civilians were killed and 39 wounded. The Batista government said in a communique New Year's eve, before Batista fled, that rebel casualties were 3000. A government source said 1000 or more army men had fallen.

The army losses are be and One Coat colors covers Cracked Plaster COOK'S P2IINTS Now on SATURDAY NIGHTS ED WILSON'S Uciigioiis Programs on KSI) for Sunday, January 1 Sacred Heart Program to 7:15 a.m. Faith in Action 7:15 to 7:30 a.m. Presbyterian U.S.A. 7:30 to 8:00 a.m. Itabbi F.

M. Iserman 8:15 to 8:30 a.m. Christian Science Program 8:30 to 8:45 a.m. The Art of Living 8:45 to 9:00 a.m. The Protestant Hour 9:00 to 9:30 n.m.

(Also on KSD-TV) National Radio Pulpit 9:30 to 10:00 a.m. CatLnlic Hour 9:30 to 10:00 p.m. Eternal Hour 10:30 to 11:00 p.m. USD 1 w- i ments, preparations will be made to equip an expedition to the moon which would establish an ohscrvatory and intermediary base there for a future space flight." The Russians have long talked about setting up space stations in orbit around the earth as the launching point for travels farther Into the solar system. The weight of their moon rocket indicates they can now send up a vehicle large enough to carry a man.

No Details Given. But the government did cot specify when it would set up an expedition to the moon. No details of the preparations were given. The director ef tho Soviet Academy of Science's main observatory, Alexander Mikhai-lov, said in a radio interview, "The time is near when man can reach the moon's surface and fly to other planets." Director Dimitry Martynov of the Sternberg State Astronomical Institute, said he considered the rocket "a true last rehearsal for the real cosmic journey a stage toward interplanetary journeys has been really achieved. The Soviet rocket to the sun has already gone farther than Mb Hilt 1 I CHAR A-1 KHRUSHCHEV GOES TO MINSK LONDON.

Jan. 3 (AP) While his latest proof of Soviet scientific ability was speeding off to the moon, Nikita Khrushchev sped off to Minsk today. The Moscow radio said the Soviet Premier went to the capital of the White Russian Soviet Socialist Republic to help celebrate Us fortieth birthday. I PLATE Talent Show Be watching 6:00 p.m. lieved to have caused Batista to fear his troops would turn against him rather than continue the 25-month-old fight against Castro's guerrilla war- riors.

This fear presumably I led to the dictator's flight. i The rebel broadcast did not give government losses but said the commander of the Batista forces, Brig. Gen. Joaquin Casilla, and three of his staff officers were captured and executed. Another rebel broadcast said Maj.

William Morgan, identified only as a North American, has been named military commander of the Jjr downtown 7 ST. LOUIS HILLS ciayton 7J: SHOPPING IS EASY AT 1 i Platts Notched ot Any of Our 3 Stores! i Paul Hawkins Dies. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 3 (UPD Paul Hawkins, founder of the Good Humor Ice Cream died yesterday at Parkview Hospital. He was 62 years old.

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