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The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 2

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Coverly Open Monday Night Till 9 THE POST-STANDARD, Syracuse, N. Y. Monday, March 7, 1955 There's COLOR and a VELVET TOUCH in a Suit of Tailored by The Heartiness of Tweed And the Luxury of Silk Here Is one of the most interest- Ing end choicest suitings to ap- peor in decades! it provides tho heartiness of tweed and the luxury of silk interwoven with the tweed yarns. It has richness and lustre and a distinctive color outlook. Tailored ct Fashion Park with an exactness that shows in every smart tine.

WELLS COVERLY LOOKING FOR A ROYAL HANDOUT-- Gotland's hard winter and heavy snow brought these deer out in the open in search of food near Balmoral, summer home of Britain's royal family. Grouridskeepers on the royal preserve hsve resorted to hand feeding to aid the hungry animals. (AP Wirepboto). Hundreds Forced From Homes by Rising Ohio River HUNTINGTON, W. March 6 UPt-- Hundreds of families, the largest number downriver at Cat- lettsburjf, were forced out of their homes tonight by the Ohio River flood, But the Weather Bureau said crests predicted lasl night will not be exceeded and "the situation looks a little bettor." Dam 28, above Huntington, is expected to crest at 56.5 feet at 5 m.

tomorrow. Flood level there is 50 vfeet. Evacuation of families is in full swing at Callettsburg. where the Big Sandy and Ohio Rivers meet. Mayor William A.

Stewart said about 800 ot the town's 4,700 residents will be forced out of their homes by the time the crest reaches there tomorrow night. The Ohio State Highway Patrol said today 491 homes and 98 businesses spanning 10 Ohio counties wore evacuated by noon today. The patrol said the river was falling east and north of Marietta, but was rising up to one- i foot an hour from that point to the Cincinnati dam. At Wheeling. W.

Wheeling Steel Corp. said the swollen Ohio River will "seriously curtail" operations of its mills at Steubenville and Mingo Junction in Ohio, end at Wheeling and Enwood, W. Va. The American Red Cross said In Washington that chapters in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Indiana now have seven shelters open and are providing food and clothing to an estimated 000 to 1,000 families forced from their homes by high water. So far about 1,600 families have suffered damage to their homes and property, the Red Cross said.

Blustery Cold Hits Most of Nation By The Associated Preut A blustery March cold spell cov- miltee. erert almost all sections of the na-i He declined to comment orrso tion yesterday, Only coastal areas'whether he thought there was of natural state a i Adherents of this viewpoint, he in the West, Southeast, South i a responsible for the story and not only increased the explosive said, also "are increasingly reluc- Eastern New England escaped the added, "The only thing I can sayjwallop of the weapon but also tant to admit that the United unseasonable weather, (is that their story had no veri- caused the production of radio- States has a right to withdraw Throughout tfcc East early aft-'fiable authoritative sou es'active "fission products" having from the UN." And, Bricker AEC Silent on Report U. S. Has Cheap New 'Superbomb' WASHINGTON, March 6. UP)-- in the weapon created some in- The Atomic Energy Commission declined comment today on a published report that the United terest.

(Actually, Uranium in its natural state consists of both U-238 and material. 1 TM" vv i ed somethinglu-235, the latter being the type new and relative cheap in the known to be usable in thermonuclear weapons i (U-238 is much more plentiful using unrefined uranium as a U-235--the ratio in nature being 140 parts U-238 to every The report was that- on March one part of U-235. But there has 1. 1954, in the Pacific tests, the United States exploded a "super- bomb" consisting of an H-bomb core--and an atomic bomb to trigger it--but that the outer jacket of the bomb consisted of "natural state (U-238). Sen.

Hickcrilooper said he had secn the public report "and the story in rny judgment is only a speculative story. I couldn't verify or deny it." Hickenloopcr is a member of the Joint Atomic Energy Com- been no statement from official sources that U-238 is fissionable to the extent that it could be used in a bomb.) There have been previous reports, from authoritative sources, that American weaponeers saw possibilities of producing H-bombs cheaper than those first con- Bricker Sees U.S. Membership in UN Threat to Union PITTSBURGH, March 6. UB -Sen. Bricker CR-O.) said today that, after 10 years In the United Nations, this country i's faced with Jelke Retrial on Vice Charges Slated to Commence Today NEW YORK, March 6.

tfj-- The attorney for Minot F. (Mickey) Jelke, whose retrial on cafe society vice charges begins tomorrow, said today he would wel- come 'courageous women as members of a jury to hear the case against the oleomargarine heir. The attorney, George Washington Herz, said women who could discuss the case "without embarrassment" would be an asset to the defense, adding: "Nobody knows a woman like I vi Ward, now 21, for and conspiring to do the with Marguerite Cordova, 26. Some names leaked out during the first trial from the testimony of Miss Ward, a lower East girl who changed her name from Sandra Wisotsky. Both Miss Ward and Miss Cordova will be prosecution witnesses in the new trial.

Jelked served seven months in the workhouse in 1953 for two guns found illegally in his possession at the time he was arrested. Free in $45.000 bail, last year married blonde Sylvia Eder. 27, whom police claim was sharing Mickey's apartment when they raided it. a constitutional issue "explosive" as that which led to the Civil War. The when Lincoln entered the White House, he said, was whether the American Union should be preserved.

Now, said Bricker, the great constitutional issue is, "Shall the Union he kept American?" a woman. Jelke, now 25, was convicted on two counts of compulsory prostitution in a sensational trial that started Feb. 22, 1953, and lasted 25 days. He received a three to six-year prison term but won a new trial from the state Court of Appeals last December. The state's highest court based its reversal of the conviction on! grounds that Jelke was denied af fair trial because the press andj public were barred from portions: HOLLYWOOD, March 6.

of the trial. lEmniy hits the big time tomorrow The presiding judge, Francis L.s Valente, barred his courtroom ht when the seventh annual outsiders "in the interest of of the Television Academy lie decency and morals." will be secn ort national TV for Tomorrow, as selection of a 1 begins, Jelke again will face ith S. ra f- TMTM' the female and more Emmy Awarding To Be Televised Valente, who refused to disqualify 4 himself for the retrial. TM oc em counterpart of Oscar. Jclke's arrest Aug.

15, 1952, in She a sexy babe with wings oa his fashionable East Side apart- ack uand an electronic sym, ment, touched off a scandal 01 er outstretched arms, shook cafe society. jEmmys backers hope that some Involved in the case were da her fame Wlil rival a a-night call girls who assertedly the stolid, 27-year-old Oscar. often plied their trade in smart upper East Side supper clubs. Tomorrow night the Emmies will be presented to the top TV In the first trial, due to shows and performers in 21 cate- ban, many names of men allegedly jgorics over the NBC network, involved with the high-price a 11.30 m. to 1 a.

m. Tha girls went unmentioned. show will emanate from This time, the defense says, Rouge here and from ceived--possibly even involving! disposal of the A-bomb "trigger." ld 1 TM lccs But there has been no previous aie contending that the UN is a mention of a "jacket" of natural- government, that its charter is a state uranium. wo ld constitution and that sov- The published -report about the croign powers of the already "U-bomb" said use of have been surrendered to it. names will go on the record.

rue Supper Club in New York. Jelke was convicted on two ofiSteve Allen will be in charge of nine original counts. These here, Dave Garroway in accused him of procuring Fat! New York. ernoon temperatures were Ifi to degrees lower than those Saturday. Along with the cold air come rain, some snow and sleet over the Great Lakes, the Northern Rockies, Minnesota and Iowa.

In the southeast, Albany, reported a midday temperature of 85. Brownsville, Texas, and Tallahassee, both had 84. In Miami it was 75. Both in Minnesota and North i more deadly potentialities than The report that "natural Irom the theoretical uranium (U-238)" had been used-cobalt bomb. Masked Gunmen Slay Ex-Convict CHICAGO, March fl, GOP to Reconsider NYC Rent Control ALBANY.

March 6. the added in a speech before the Twentieth Century Club here, "remember that on this vital question the charter is silent." "Unless our relationship with the UN is clarified within the reasonably near future, we shall bequeath to our children an'd grandchildren almost certain civil strife," the senator said. Bricker said the Senate received "repeated assurances 1 when it was lican leaders of the Legislature.considering ratification of the UN Dakota, below zero a a Rtinmcn riddled an exp a I dcci-lcharter a member nations had thermometer readings were a 9 arrested burglar the highest on record for the date.I The shooting occurred in front A weather a rainbow of the Twenty Hundred Club, a in the wake of a blast I i this country and its terms Thomas J. Curran, the not be changed except with the consent of the president and vv tuiuiimi.y--H illnDOW me J. JLUIIUIUU mainrif in -i.

1 1 i 11 i i A I US JAL.ULI II1C1J I 1 i-ica ill by during a thunderstorm-- tavern on the northwest side, as I atrroed last week occurred around Fllnley. Tenn. The the owner, Rock Cassella. 35 and to Icufndlords passScrewed ex- bright. tho West (another man lod on to their tenants and to nenses on er find in the East a rainbow stood talking about SkeetlL two-family while a storm raged.

i 4 Persons Perish In Cotraqe Blaze shooting. owner-occupied dwellings. Cassclla told police that two! Friday, Curran told reporfc- New the Senate. Also, Bricker said, "We must make sure that not even the president and the Senate can make changes in that contract that conflict with the Constitution of the United 1 Untie a constitutional amend- mcn drove up near the tavern in: ers that the GOP vote in a tour-door blue sedan. jumped out, move." and 8 hol Grudecki.

sUnd-; a He called them "entirely have rce WILMINGTON. MHSS, March G. nfi nearby. Mndofcnsible" and "bad for is in i i the Consti persons pprishod and two Grudecki hnd been i i in people of our city and the state. i nor could i' become effec- a toria i tavern earlic-r.

Cassclla said cottage in both men wore masks. They es- U. S. JOINS EUROPE FAIR I A ODERN SIZE a city would be cut "trc- proposed bv Bricker. no shouting "don't men dously" if the proposals were tl eatv international Grudecki.

sUnd-; a He called them "entirely have nr "rce I i the Silvot Lnkc section. capcd in the car. in i I Mcfld 'l Cassclla a dctcctor FRANKFURT, Germany, March tlve as i a i a law except tho a genate i oisiation was detained -for a 110,6. WR--The United States made its The amendment, opposed by the test. Police said direct participation in a post- Eisenhower administration, failed John stimhim.

a round a shotgun, several pistols war European, fair today as a One to i the required K. bteDhpns, 26, formerly of and a i i his tavern. They furt's annual five-day spring m- two-thirds majorit- in the Senate sought Lacurcia for questioning, clustrinl exhibition opened. ast year Bricker has reoffered it in the present Congress. Blaze in Hotel Routs Almost 400 INDIANAPOLIS, March 6, (fft--A fire that sountied its own alarm routed almost 400 guests from the 17-floor Washington Hotel in the heart of downtown Indianapolis early today.

It caused relatively light damage and no injuries. Manager Clark Dohm said it might have developed into a tragic fire, but the damaged a telephone in an unoccupied bakery room an'd flashed an open circuit on the hotel switchboard. Bell Capt. Peter DePaul, 35, investigated and found the 16th- floor bakery in flames. FILTER TIP TAREYTON PATENTS PENDING An entirely new concept in cigarette filtration.

A filter tip of purified cellulose, incorporating Activated Charcoal, a filtering substance world-famous as a purifying agent, notably for air, water and beverages. PRODUCT OP in BOSTONIAN FOOTSAVERS With Bostonian's celebrated Footsaver construction every dip and curve of the foot is matched, cushioned and supported for perfect, effortless fit, $150,000 Fire Hits Salamanca Block SALAMANCA, March 6. Fire of undetermined origin roared through a three-story business block in Main st. today, causing darnafees estimated at $150,000. Most seriously damaged were a shoe store and a drug store, both of which were wrecked by the flames.

A portion of the brick buildings occupied by a Sears-Roebuck store was extensively damaged by smoke and water but apparently was untouched by the fire. FRED HILLEGAS REPORTS THE NEWS 12:05 p. Monday Saturday WSYR RADIO Police Say Youth Killed Half-Sister Pictured here is an ultra-smart wing tip in russet luxura calf with half double sole, rubber heel, custom Boot- maker finish. One of the finest shoes on two feet! $22 95 LONDON, March 6. W)--Police today charged Leonard John Coley, 20, with the murder of his pretty; young half sister in the arty Bloomsbury district.

The girl, Irene Coley, 18, found with her throat slashed last' night beneath a sycamore tree in Tavistock Square gardens. Coley will appear at Clerken- well Magistrate's court tomorrow. Police would give no indication of! a motive. ROBERT NELSON COMMENTS ON THE NEWS at 12:15 p. Wells Coverly Bostonian Shoe Shop Street Floor PLANE CRASH KILLS 5 RIO DE JANERIO, a i March 6.

persons werej killed today when a Heal Airline; DCS crashed at Conquista in the State of Baia, the airline said. There were 31 persons aboard the 'plane. Monday Saturday NBC SYRACUSE RADIO 570 ON YOUR DIAL I.

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About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978