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The Times Record from Troy, New York • Page 1

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The Times Recordi
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Troy, New York
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1
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THE WEATHER Tonight--Pair, cooler. SERIES 195.1-NO. 239 TROY, N. MONDAY EVENING. OCTOBER RECORD FINAL EDITION Rid DC a I8 gl.

reiCE HVE CENTS nks Lead Giants In Fourth Game gway Accepts Red Plan Warplanes Ready To Defend Country Washington (AP)--Fighter planes at undisclosed bases throughout the country are ready 24 hours a day to meet an enc-my attack, according to Secretary of the Air Finletter. He made this statement during recent testimony before the House Military Appropriations subcommittee. The in- are ready to up, and each field has a readiness building in which men stay when they, have the alert watoh, Finletter said. FIN KOREA United Nations Forces Blast Out Further Gains On 70-Mile Front Eighth Army Headquarters, Ko- 'rea (UP)--United Nations forces blasted out gains of up to a mile on.a seventy-mile front today and the Chinese Reds were reported rushing an entire army east to prevent a break-through. An American division commander said the Chinese appeared to be moving an army of some 30,000 men to the east-central front to bolster North Korean units be lieved to have lost 75 per cent of their men in recent bloody fighting.

Despite their mounting losses, however, the Reds were putting up a desperate fight. They threw -South Korean troops off a high peak overlooking Valley 1 on the eastern front and halted American rtoops just short of the summit of the last enemy- held peak on "Heartbreak Ridge" on the east-central sector. Just west of "Heartbreak Ridge," 'however, the Ninth Regiment of the U. S. Second-Division took several more small bills in tough fighting on "Kim II Sung Ridge," named for the North Korean premier and commander in -chief.

The 38th Regiment, also from the Second Division, at the same time captured a small hill in Mundung Valley between the two ridges. And on the Western front, the U. S. First Cavalry Division smashed ahead 1,000 to 1,500 yards north northwest of Yonchon. Army the week-old' offensive designed to force the Reds to make had begun to "hurt the The spokesman said 11,520 Communist troops were killed or Wounded and 494 taken prisoners in the first week ended Friday.

Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet, commander of the Eighth Army, promised that the fall offensive would continue in "many phases until the Chinese 'volunteers' and the North Koreans have had enough of it." The offensive a a has cracked the Communists' main winter' defense line and is threatening to break through to valleys leading in the west to Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, and in the east to the strategic port of Wonsan. The whole front was aflame from north of Seoul in the west peace- to "Punchbowl Valley" eastern mountains.

in the FOUND DEAD ON TRACKS. Port Jervis man found dead along the Erie Railroad tracks two miles east of here today was identified as Edward Kremas, of Bloomfield, N. J. Police said he apparently had been struck by a train as he walked along the tracks. FLY NEWSCASTS Every Hour On The Hour 7 a.m.

to 11 p.m. 92.3 megacycles (Channel 222) The FM. Voice of The Record Newspapers General Says Proposal Meets Fundamental Condition Of Equality Tokyo Matthew B. Ridgway tonight accepted in principle the Communist proposal that Korean cease-fire begin anew near Panmunjom. The supreme allied commander said a site in the "immediate vicinity" of that Red outpost, six miles southeast of Kaesong, would meet the "fundamental condition of equality of movement and control." The Reds broke off the talks at Kaesong Aug.

23. Ridgway told the top Communist commanders in Korea he was in- itructing his liaison officers to meet Red liaison officers at 10 a.m. Wednesday (8 p.m. Tuesday, E.S.T.) to hammer'out details for reopening talks. presumably the liaison meeting be held in Panmunjom, as were most of its predecessors.

Communist Proposal. Ridgway answered a Red note received In it the Reds proposed: 1. The truce talks be shifted to Panmunjom. 2. The Kaesong five-mile zone be extended to include Munsan, "ite of the U.N.

Command advance headquarters, about 15 miles away. 3. Both sides to assume responsibility for controling the conference site--in effect to establish joint armed control. "It is my view," Ridgway said, 'that all that is 'necessary is a small neutral zone around the new conference site, with Kaesong, Munsan and the road to Panmun- jom -from. and Munsan free from attack." His message -may mean that allie troops are in the area the Reds want cleared and Ridgway does not want to pull them out.

He said it was essential that any new site -be located approximately halfway between the allied and Communist front lines. Closer to Agreement. "Only so," his message said, "can each side be expected to discharge its share of responsibility for the security of the approaches to the conference site and of the site itself." The message was addressed to Kim II Sung, North Korean premier, and 'Gen. Peng Teti-haui, commander of Chinese Communist forces in North Korea. Ridgway opened his reply with the statement: "(I) again categorically state that the responsibility for the delay in negotiations during the last several weeks Is yours." The exchange of a leaves the two sides about one mile (Continued on Page 14) FIVE KILLED A INTO TREE AFTER HIGHWAY SKID Gainesville, Va.

(UP)--A 23- year-old trailwry bus driver today blamed an oncoming car which crowded him for the crash of his packed bus in which five persons were killed and at least 25 injured. The crowded bus, with ten to 15 persons standing in the aisles, skidded on a. rain-wet highway last night near here and folded around a tree. The bus was en- route from Front Royal, to Washington, D. C.

Rescue workers used acetylene torches to cut out a side in the bus to release some passengers who were The injured were taken to hospitals in nearby towns. The injured driver, Alvin Shepherd, of Washington, told Lynn Alvey of Gainesville, that he was rounding a bend when an oncoming car crowded him. REGISTRATION FALLS WAY OFF IN NEW YORK New York (AP)--New York City's registration of 1,918,540 lor the Nov. 6 election lowest in eight years--brought conflicting claims and prophesies today from rival camps in the four-way fight for city council president. The registration, completed Saturday night, was far below the totals for the somewhat comparable off-year elections of 1947 and 1950.

under The 1947 figure was 443.623 and 888,353 under 1950. Also, it was 1,395,709 under the presidential year of 1948. EARTHQUAKE RECORDED. Cleveland (AP)--An hour-long moderate earthquake in the vicinity of the Virgin Islands was recorded last night at John Carroll University's seismological observatory. Princess Arrives To Begin Tour Of Canada come them.

As the huge bridge, lieutenant Newfoundland. The plane, ahead a Likely To Appear Before Security Council Thursday New York (AP)--Iran's Premier Mohammed Mossadegh arrived here by plane today to defend his country's oil nationalization program before the United Nations. A spokesman for the Royal Dutch KLM airlines said the premier's plane landed at 11:20 a.m., E.S.T., and that Mossadegh left without having to go through the usual customs and immigration check. The ailing, 72-year-old premier planned to stay at New York leaving the hospital only to attend sessions of the U.N. security council.

The council is not expected to meet before. Thursday. Meantime the aged and ailing premier is expected to hold bedside conferences with U.N. diplomats from a suite in New York Hospital. Iran contends that nationalization of her oil is a domestic problem and the U.N.

should refuse to interfere. Mossadegh, a fervent nationalist, led the fight to drive Britain's Anglo-Iranian Oil Company out of Iran from his bed in his modest private house in Tehran. He rarely left it except to appear in parliament, where he made impassioned pleas--sometimes accompanied by fainting spells--for sup- pjrt against what he regarded as foreign exploiters. Mossadegh is accompanied by his physician son, his daughter, Deputy Premier Hussein Fatemi, three members of the Iranian National Oil Board and other officials. Tehran dispatches said there were 17 in the party.

In the U.N. battle over the fate of the A.I.O.C., Mossadegh will face Britain's suave Sir Gladwyn Jebb, whose rapier-like wit has punctured the rhetoric of such a formidable adversary as Russia's Jabob A. Malik. The S. has maintained a rigorous silence about its position in the council.

It is known, however, that the U. S. fears the council would turn down any British resolution bearing down too hard on Iran because of the sensitivity of small countries to cries of "imperialism." "The U.S. is known to fear also that outside pressure on Iran might drive the country into the hands of Russia. Majic Movaghar, Iranian parliamentary deputy who is accompanying Mossadegh, said in Rome yesterday: "We have been offered aid by Russia, but as we are in the western bloc, we are not anxious to accept that, although we may be forced to do so eventually.

"The British are doing everything possible to prevent us get- wivi ting technical assistance for theT Dr fc 0 refineries. We have already been offered asistance by Germany and Sweden, and if we win our case at the U.N., there will be nothing to prevent us getting assistance from America. "Our one aim is to get rid of Britain, and we will go to any extreme to do this." Elizabeth And. a Land At Dorval Airport Near Montreal Montreal (AP)--Princess Elizabeth and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, came to Canada in a Transatlantic plane today for their first visit to the North. American continent.

Their great 60-ton plane as sighted over Dorval Airport here at 11:31 a.m. E.S.T. Ten minutes later the royal couple stepped from the plane at Dorval Airport, 16 miles outside Montreal. They were 19 minutes ahead of schedule. The governor general, Viscount Alexander, was on hand to wel- alks Near Panmunjon Deplores Refusal Of State Department To Admit Past Errors Washington (AP)--Harold E.

Stassen contended today ord makes it plain the American-built stratocruiser "canopus" rumbled into view overhead, thousands of Canadians massed at Dorval Airport cheered lustily. A guard of honor snapped to attention, ready the rec- State De- SCORE BY INNINGS YANKEES GIANTS 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 R. EL E. Play-By-Play Story HEAVY HA' STALLS TRAFFIC partment played a part in undermining the Chinese Nationalists, and contradicts denials by Secretary Dean Acheson and Ambassa- doh Philip C. Jessup.

Testifying before a Senate For-, eign Relations subcommittee, Stas-jMcmy Homes Darkened And Water Halts Brooklyn Subway Service New York CAP) Trfunder- storms with driving rain and high winds swept the New York metropolitan, area last night, leaving a wake of stalled highway traffic, darkened homes, and disrupted communications and transporta- i ciiHUdOoOUUl." 1 hf a cou le on post in which he represents this country on many special to the first stop of their will include a visit to Washington at end of October. The Princess and her husband barely missed a drab, chill reception. Threatening clouds lifted and the sun broke through only a short time'before the plane came into view. Throughout the night and into the morning a cold rain had fallen, drenching the gay flags and bunting with which the airport was festooned for the ocpasion The ace pilot of the British Overseas Airways o. P.

-Jones, nad been flying at 24,000 feet reporting fine weather above the low- hanging clouds. At the airport authorities had made, arrangements to handle a crowd of 100,000. "'The plane touched down at sen said: "The denials by the State Department of things which I know are the claims by the State Department of things I know are not true, leave me very uneasy and disturbed with regard to our country's future policy." The Senate group is considering Jessup's nomination to be a delegate to the coming United Nations General Assembly meeting in Paris. He is now an ambassador- Gander, at 4:50 a.m. (E for refuelling.

There the Princess and the Duke were-welcomed by a message from: Sir Leonard Outer- governor of of schedule, occasions. Stassen, former Republican governor of Minnesota and new president of the University of Pennsylvania, testified last week on the Jessup nomination. He said then that the late Sen. Arthur Vandenberg told him that Acheson and Jessup plugged at a secret White House meeting in 1949 for a cut-off of aid to Nationalist China. Achesort Council Member.

As a follow-up to this testimony, excerpts from Vandenberg's diary were made public in New York last night At one point in the diary, Vandenberg wrote! that President Truman reported at a 1949 White House meeting that he had a recommendation from the National Security Council that U. S. "aid to- Nationalist China be stopped. The excerpts did not mention Jessup as being present and did control tower at Dorval Field announced the plane should be sighted in another 15 minutes, the anticipation. Canadian doffed their raincoats crowd stirred with mounties and stood shoulder to shoulder with Quebe provincial police to watch the crowd and guarantee the security of the royal couple.

On a special siding near the airport, the royal train chugged readiness. The road leading to the airport was lined with cheering throngs. Once aboard the train the royal party will proceed to Quebec, where the tour will officially begin tomorrow. The tour will take in some 70 cities, towns and villages where the royal couple will spend from a few minutes to two days. huge blue and silver royal primer took off last night from London, airport for the month-long visit to this senior dominion and to the United States.

EDWARD ARNOLD WEDS. Fairfield, Conn. (INS)--Portly screen star Edward Arnold was married to Mrs. dee McCain, former director of the De- trort Welfare Bureau. It was the third marriage for the 61-year-old Arnold and the second for the TEXAS COUNTY JUDGE A OF FEEDING MEXICANS "DOG FOOD" Washington (AP)--The Labor Department has accused a Texas county judge of feeding Mexican farm workers canned meat imported as "dog food--unfit for consumption." The department has cancelled his contract to feed and house them.

The judge, R. E. Bibb of Maverick County, could not be reached for comment. The Labor Department said he is a prominent businessman and chairman of the Democratic county committee. It cancelled, 1 effective Nov.

1, a contract under which- Bibb food and housing at Eagle Pass, Texas, for Mexicans brought into this country to do farm work. Undersecretary of Labor Michael J. Calvin said Bibb had served the Mexican migratory worke'rs meat from Mexico which had cleared customs labeled "animal food" and invoiced "dog food--unfit for human consumption." The labels tion. In Connecticut, state police expected flooding at high tide and notified persons living along Long Island Sound to leave their homes. At Milford, schools were opened to accommodate persons leaving homes on the shore.

Winds exceeding thirty miles an lour, and reaching fifty miles an lour in gusts, buffeted the Sound throughout the night. Clearer weather was forecast for The Weather Bureau pre- not say what Acheson's -view was. tional Security Council. Vandenberg wrote that President Truman, on advice of congressional leaders, turned down the recommendation although the President's military advisers favored stopping aid to China. At the start of today's hearing, Chairman Sparkman the subcommittee was concerned only with Jessup's fitness for the U.N.

post, but Stassen's testimony related to the whole course of U. S. policy in- the Far East. Two Major Points. He said the "two major central points" of his testimony, on which he was prepared to present extensive evidence, were these: "1.

There has been for a number of years a world wide pattern of which has had as. its consequence the undermining of the Chinese Nationalist Party and of Chiang Kai-shek and the turning of China to almost complete domination by the Chinese Communist Party and by Mao Tse Tung. "2. There is now in its early stages a similar world wide pattern of action which would have as its consequence the undermining of the Congress Party of India and of Premier Nehru and the turning of India to the domination (Continued on Page 14) Polo Grounds play- by-play of the fourth game of the World Series between the Yankees and Giants follows: First Inning. Yanks--Bauer walked.

Rizzuto fanned swinging. Berra lined out to Mays in center. DiMaggio fanned on a called third strike after fouling off half a dozen balls. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. Giants--Stanky went out on line drive to Rizzuto.

Dark smashed a double off the left field wall. McDougald threw Thompson out at first on a slow roller. Dark went to third. Irvin singled to left, scoring Dark. It was Irvin's eighth hit of the series and put the Giants ahead 1 to 0.

Irvin went out stealing, Berra to Rizzuto. One run, two hits, no errors, none left. Second Inning. Yanks Woodling doubled to left. Thompson fumbled McDougald's grounder.and the runner was safe at first but Woodling forced to hold second.

Mays made a spectacular catch strong winds, but as yesterday and today. dicted fresh to not as strong last night. The storm reached night after a day of nasty, and squally weather. It left thousands of in New York City, Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut without electricity and telephone service. Many basements were flooded throughout the area: Water tumbled into the New York subway system through, walk gratings and disrupted service on most lines in Brooklyn and some in For more than an hour -there were no trains on one Brooklyn route.

Poles were over oy tne wind, blocking" Veferan Arrested For Killing His Mother And Grandmothei Warren Fiske McConihe, veteran accused of the slaying of his mother and grandmother, is the grandson of Isaac McConihe, a former mayor of Troy, who also represented a New York district in Congress and was once Democratic State chairman of New York. Providence, R. I. (AP) The mother and grandmother of a Harvard-schooled war veteran were mansion off and police quoted the veteran as saying he killed them because he feared they would send him back to a mental hospital. Strangled in their nightgowns were Mrs.

Celeste Fisk McConihe, found slain in their Angel Street today "smashed weight." Rundle them with a paper- said McConihe was undergoing routine questioning after being arrested on a charge of leaving the scene of an accident in East Hampton, about 4 yesterday. said, McConihe leaped (E.S.T.) Rundle upon two troopers in the Coichest er barracks and tried to grab them by the throat. He was removed to Norwich Hospital and there, Rundle said, McConihe "suddenly broke down and confessed the murders." Providence police were notified and they forced a window in the three-story mansion and found the bodies in a second floor bedroom. Lt. Thomas Gorman said the 50, and Flora J.

Capron FiskJMcConihes were descended from i Prominent family dating back to 81, both widows. Seized by Connecticut police after an automobile accident and later committed temporarily to Norwich Hospital, an institution for mental patients, was Warren Fisk McConihe, 27. Lt. Robert Rundle of the Con- were removed after the food nectiw state police served, Galvin said. and grandmother and colonial times.

Their palatial home was one of the oldest on the fashionable east side, a showplace on Diman Place, just off Angel Street. Lieutenant Gorman said the son was graduated from the Harvard School of Business in 1947. The year before, he added, Warrer was discharged as a technical ser geant of field artillery. traffic in many places. Splashing water also stalled a number of automobiles.

A Brooklyn street had a cavein, and some Bronx- roads were flooded. Lightning struck some transformers and buildings. Hundreds of calls for help in cleaning up storm debris flooded police. Short circuits added to police woes by setting off false fire and burglar alarms. On Staten Island, bus drivers fell behind schedule because of poor visibility.

High seas delayed island's ferryboats five to ten minutes. The Coast Guard in New York said it received numerous distress calls from small craft in Long Island waters, but that all the boats reached shore safely. Rainfall amounted to 2.41 inches in the metropolitan area between 6:55 a.m. and midnight, according to the Weather Bureau. At Riverhead, N.

on Long Island, the Taconic River overflowed its banks. Rains also niled Catskill Mountain streams to the brink. Brown's liner to right, slipping and 'ailing to the turf after the catch. Woodling raced to third. Colluu singled to right scoring Woodling.

Reynolds flied out to Irvin. Bauer's infield grounder hit McDougald on the leg for an automatic single and an automatic out. One run, three hits, one error, two left. Giants--Lockman fanned swing ing. Thomson walked.

Mays grounded into a double play, Riz zuto to McDougald to Collins. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Third Inning. Yanks--Thomson threw out Rizzuto at first. Berra lined to Thompson in right field; DiMaggio singled into left field for his first base hit of the series.

Woodling flied out to Irvin. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Giants Westrum Polo Grounds In Good Condition Despite Heavy Rainfall Polo Grounds (AP)--Joe DI- Maggio's home run smash into the left field stands in the fifth inning scoring Berra ahead of him, gave the Yanks a 4 to 1 lead over the New York Giants in the fourth game of the World Series here today. The Yanks got a run in the second on Woodling's double and a single by Joe Collins and Reynolds drove in another run in the fourth with a single, scoring Brown. The Giants got a run in the, first on Bark's double and Irvin's New York (AP)--A bright sunshine, soaking up.

the damage done by yesterday's rainfall, assured the fans of a fourth World Series game today. The Polo Grounds was in remarkably good condition despite the steady downpour that had disrupted traffic and baited subways in New York last night. The infield was in top shape as it was protected by a tarpaulin. There were damp spots in the outfield and mud along the outer fringe. But workmen scattered sand in the bad spots.

Two hours before game time there were dry patches along the foul lines had been fully exposed to yesterday's deluge. The bleacher gates were open early and the $1 customers swarmed in some 3,000 strong Standing room at $4 a copy was not selling like it did Saturday Maglie also fanned. out. Stanky fouled no out to Berra. No runs, no errors, none left.

Fourth Inning. Yanks McDougald flied Mays to in center. Dark made a the bag with a dazzling stop of Brown's sizzling grounder behind second- but his throw to first pulled Lockman off and Brown was credited single. walked, singled to center, scoring Brown but Reynolds was run down as he tried to-make second, Mays to Dark to Lockman. Collins went to third.

Thomson threw Bauer out at first. One run, two hits, no errors, one left. Giants--Dark dented' the left field wall with his second straight double. Thompson popped out to McDougald. Irvin went down swinging.

Lockman fiied to DiMaggio. No runs, one nit, no errors, one left. Fifth Inning. Yanks--Rizzuto popped to Stanky. Berra singled to right.

DiMaggio crashed a home run into the upper left field stands, scoring Berra ahead of him and putting the Yanks ahead 4 1. Woodling popped out to Dark. McDougald fanned. Two runs, two hits, no errors, none left. Giants--Thomson walked.

Mays hit into a double play, Reynolds to Rizzuto to Collins. Westrum walked. Jack Lohrke Maglie. Lohrke flied batted for out to Mc- No runs, no hits, no er- Dougald. rors, one left.

Sixth Inning. Yanks--Sheldon Jones went in to pitch for the Giants, doubled to left-center. Brown Collins flied out to Irvin. Reynolds went out, Thomson to Lockman, Brown hol'ding second. Bauer lined out to Stanky.

No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Giants--Stanky struck out. Dark got his third straight double a hot grounder third base line that and on TITO LISTS A I CHURCH AND REFUGEES ABROAD CHIEF ENEMIES Rankovieevo, Yugoslavia (AP)-Premier Marshal Tito has listed the Roman Catholic Church as one of Yugoslavia's major enemies in the western world. He spoke yesterday in this southern Serbian town to a crowd officially estimated at 50.000, gathered at the graves of 5,000 persons massacred here by the Germans ten years ago. "It would be wrong to believe," Tito said, "after all the help which America, Britain.

France and other western countries have given us. that, in these countries which seem friendly to us, there are no enemies of our country. There are. "In the first place there is the Catholic Church--the Vatican-which is undermining our position in all-the countries where we are 1 seeking the help which we need." FAMED ARTIST DIES He coupled Yugoslav refugees IN KINGSTON HOSPITAL Kingston (AP)--Austin Mecklem, 57, noted artist, died last night in Kingston Hospital, follow- ROUNDWORLD FLIGHT water colors Pittsburg (AP)--Rep. Peter F.

bv Mecklem are in the permanent Mack, resumed his collections of the Speed Memorial round-the-world good will flight to- Museum, Louisville, the (at 10:12 E.S.T.) after threat- ened bad weather caused an overnight stop in Pittsburg, He described his solo flight as, "strictly uneventful so far" before i City, he lifted his silver and red monoplane into the air at the Allegheny County Airport. He landed last night when the threat of flying weather cut short the initial leg of his long flight. when a new National League series record of 52,035 was set Holding a 2-1 edge over the Yanks, the Giants counted on their ace, Sal Maglie (36-S), to put them in a commanding position. If Maglie should win, the Giants could close out the series at the Polo Grounds tomorrow, climaxing their spectacular comeback. Allie Reynolds (17-8) loser to Dave Koslo in game, was back matters.

the 5-1 opening to try to square The. Yank hitters were leaving a heavy burden on the So far the outfield had pitchers. only two hits and the fellow who got one of them, Mickey Mantle was in the hospital. Joe DiMaggio' and Hank Bauer both were hitless The players were anxious for a sellout at this fourth game 'for Which the share. $441,179.57 already in the player pool, another crowd like Saturday's would set a new player pool record.

The Cleveland Indians and Boston set the old mark with 5548,214 in 1948. The starting lineups: YANKS rf. Rizzuto, ss. Berra, c. DiMaggio, cf.

Woodling, If. McDougald, 2b. Brown, 3b. Collins, Ib. Reynolds, p.

GLINTS Stanky, 2fa. H. Thompson rf. Irviri, If. Lockman, ib.

R. Thomson, 3b. Mays, cf. Westrum, c. Maglie, p.

hugged the rolled into left field foul territory after passing the bag. Thompson flied to Rizzuto in short left. Irvin fouled out to Collins. No runs, one hit no errors, one left, abroad, with the Catholic Church as enemies of his government. REP.

MACK RESUMES hamton (N. Museum of Fine Arts, and the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Modem Museum of Art, both in New York A native of Colfsx, Meek- lorn resided in Woodstock, N. vived by two years. He is sur- children and his widow, Marianne Appel Mecklem, also a well known artist. MAN SHOT BY JOBLESS ACTOR DIES OF WOUNDS New York (AP)--Philip Lopez, 41, who was shot by.

an unemployed actor early Saturday for no apparent reason, died yesterday in a hospital. a The actor, Frank E. Wolfe, 26 was held in Felony Court without bail on a homicide charge. He will have a hearing Oct. 22.

Lopez and Wolfe both said they were strangers. Lopez, co-owner of a restaurant, was shot in the chest with a pistol in the men's room of another cafe. REPORT 276 CASUALTIES. Washington (AP)--The Defense Department today identified 276 more battle casualties in Korea A new hst reported 21 killed, 248 wounded, three missing in action and four injured in combat zone accidents. The Index Chufch Calendar Classified 1 Cohoes Comics Crossword Puzzle Death Notices Dorothy Dix Editorials Financial Obituary Pulse of the People Radio Record Pattern Society Sports Theaters Page 21, 22, 23 13 20 16 'H 17 10 14 14 10 16 17 17 18, 19 16.

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About The Times Record Archive

Pages Available:
303,950
Years Available:
1943-1977