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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
VAEXING ALTITUDE - The high and low points at Mitchel Field are at eye level to Staff Sergeant Robert B. Parkins of Maplewood, N. J., and Staff-Sergeant Kathleen Cage of Connelis- Vllle.Pl-uflollobhm--nlln|m|htuurF-m at four tee fin trove ant tro, nre\ assigned 'to the First “(Nu Queens Girl, 4, Bitten Biggest Rat Hunt On In Fight Against Rabies The biggest rat hunt in the his- tory of Queens is on today. The hoht was ordered because a rat; that bit a pretty little 4] year-old Richmond Hill girl last week, died of rabies. The Health Department called in State and Federal au- thorittes to help stop rabies among rats, and other animals, in Rich- mond Hill. . » Health inspectors are traps for rats and mice. The Queens ASPCA is rounding up stray dogs, cats and squizrels, all susceptible to rabies. ; «00% setting ALL PET OWNERS were urged to call in a veterinatian if their dogs or cats show any signs of ill- ness. \This is the first case of rables| infection - either in animal or bu- man - in.New York City in the last four years,\ Dr. John F. Ma- honey, health commissioner, said today. The rat victim is Dorinda Dern, pretty brunette daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dern. has | last Friday when she tried to pet |a fat, gray rat she found on the Ifront porch steps of a house near her home. [teeth slashed her hand. Her mother {chased the rat. Dorinda's father rushed out of the house and 'cor- nered the rat in the backyard. He trapped it under a box. Dorinda was taken to Queens Geriera] Hospital where the rat bite was cauterized. She was also giv- en a precautionary anti - rubles In- jection. The trapped rat was taken to the | ASPCA shelter in Jamaica. It ased | there last Sunday, indicating that rables was far advanced. \Examination of the rat's brain showed that it was infected with [rables,\\ Dr. Mahoney said. Health Department inspectors were sent to Richmond Hill im- mediately to set traps for rats and mice throughout the neighborhood. \All rodents caught will be test- Continued on Page ? She WI!- bitten on the right hand | | Dorinda screamed when the rat's | What's on Television Tonight ? See Today's TV Tips on Page 20 There s No Such Tlimg as a Routine Air Raid... American B46 might to- truder bombers fiy by might ever Kores on what theAir Force calls routine patrols secking targels ofopportuni- ty -- anything rolling south carrying war supplies des- Uined for use against Allied troops. An International News Service correspondent took ® typical ride im ome of the deadly twin - engine bombers which have accounted for more than 80,000 Communist vehicles destroyed and found it somewhat \unrou- tine\ in the following dis- patch. By SID WHITE A KOREAN AIR BASE (INS) - I stuck my nose (for news) into th@s \routine\ war of the night - flying B-26 light bombers Moses Wins Battle With U.S. Road Boss A Federal road commissioner stands corrected today in his view/ on U.S. funds and Southern State] Parkway construction . . , and a! vindicated Robert Moses is breath-] ing deeply of the cleared air around | his $40,000,000 parkway improve-) ment project. + Early this week Public mm Commissioner Thomas H. MacDon- a ‘uld told the American Automobile Association that Federal funds had been used in Southern Parkway construction and therefore law would prevent collection of & toll to help pay off the improvement project. Moses, with his project up for a vote Monday in the State Senate and with some opposition expected in the jumped < out \WW 8s THE JONES BEACH Parkway Authority president and Long Is- land State Park Commission chair- man today revealed the MacDon- ' {ald answer to his red - hot let- ter. \We have re - examined our rec- ords,\ MacDonald wired, \and [find that information given by us! that Federal aid funds were used on Southern mu Parkway is in- correct. He reiterated the statement {made by Moses that the $430,000 MacDonald said was used on South- ern State actually was used on Continued on Page 2 Fisherman Says SAN FRANCISCO UM -- A fisher- man's report of seeing an unknown submarine surface off the northern California coast at dusk Tuesday Coast Guard and Air Force hunt, the Navy disclosed today. |sub contacts have been reporied about once a month over the past | 'There is no reason lo assume} that foreign submarines are not operating off our comsts. If they are beyond the three-mile limit, there is nothing we can do About Laurelton Parkway and on two\ He Saw Submarine, (touched off a widespread Navy,! A Navy spokesman said unknown | {year and added: | utmmwmum off. Over a little North Korean city called Chinnampo, I ~watched, fMinching, as flaming tracers ° squirted past the canepy of & B » 26 twisting violently in the * * x* moonlit, sky janey wid Tt was Colonel John G. Napi- er, of Scottsville, Ky., deputy commander of thé Third Bomb Wing, who had casually asked me if I would like to fly on a to escape the Com» * *-* rail (reconnalasance patroD \recky'* THREE EXCITING, action -- packed bours later I had a bet- ter idea of what lies behind the Third Bomb Wing Korean War * * record of almost 28,000 strikes against the communists, The B26 Wing claims destruc- tion of 240 locomotives, 3,500 box. cars and 20,000 vehicles, all part of the Communist military sup- ply system, * Air Strike Left Huge Orange Blue Mushrooms, L. 1. Gunner Reports A Long Island merial gunner, was both spectator and actor yesterday in a major United Na- tions allack on sprawling Red supply centers on Korea's east coast south of rubbled Wonsan. Airman First Class Sal J. Tedde of Port Washington stepped from his Buperfort after the predawn strike \I don't know what we hit, but BREEZING BY - Minot (Mickey) Jelke, right, eases out a courtroom door and past, Pat Ward, the woman he's mccused of forcing into a life of vice. Pai was standing in the ball yesterday with her attorney, J. Roland Saiz, who is hatless, and an {nvestigator, Lawrence Walker, left. Jelke was mie to take a walk early in the day, before summations to the vice trial jury. completed he was sent to jail and will remain in custedy until the jury decides his fate. = Jelke Faces: \Night in Jail By FREDERICK J. WELSH Whtrtres tive After a A jury in Manbattan Gen the fate of Minot (Mickey) Jelke III in the cafe society vice | Food Price Dip Sends Index Down By WILLIAM KERWIN WASHINGTON (INS) - A slight drop in the cost of living - caused 'mainly by lower food prices - is expected to be reported today by the government. The Bureau of Labor Statistics issues its latest - and newest ~- consumer price index based on a previous one per cent decline in food prices, officials said they be- lieved the index will drop a notch, Bome confusion, however, may result from the report. For one thing, the BLS is issuing an index} that has been streamlined and brought up to date to reflect more ‘lccummy current price develop- ments. The report will merely provide a clew to a possible penny-an-hour pay cut when the old index is pub- lished in early March. BLG is con- tinuing the old series to give the Industry time to incorporate the It, under international law.\ Continued on Page 2 Pilot Walks From Crash to Fly Rescue Shlp A young New Hyde Park pMot crash-landed a Piper Cub on a farm in Commack yesterday after- moon, walked away with nothing but m few face scratches . . . and calmly. took off in another plane to convince himself he hadn't lost his courage to fly. The pilot, Herbert Silvera, 24, of 1112 Bixth Street, flew, the sec- ond plane {o Zahn's Airport in Amityville, where be got into a car and drove to Brunswick Hospital for first aid treatment.\ A student pilot aboard the two- seater that crashed did not escape so lightly, however. The latter, Sak vatore Coniglio, 24, of 310 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, was fushed . to. Huntington Hospital with a deep scalp laceration and possible bratm ' eoncussion. ACCORDING TO state police at the Commack Barracks, the Pipet Oub, owned by the Amityville Ply ing Service, wis caught bya gust of wind about 4 P.M. yesterday as Bilvera was trying to bring it in for a dead stick emergency landing. Heading for a clear field, Bik vers spotted high tension wires in his path and quickly shifted the plane's course to head for another open field. £4 he was mtg“ the turn, the |_ Continued on Page 2 . it must have been big,\ the. air- man said. He added that he watched \four orange « yellow ground bursts go up all at once.\ \'They looked like a huge, mul: ti - colored mushroom, .then just behind them, another went off that was bluish in color.\ Official reports show that the B - 20s dropped 110 tons of high explosives on their targets. the Music eral sessions today will decide scandal. After - apparently - a sleep a ‘leu night in jail, the 23-year-old| [heir to a $6,000,000 oleo fortune | went back to the courtroom for the tinal scene of the sex drama| that has run for 30 days. Judge Prancis L. Valente began| his charge to the jury after strik- ing out six of the nine counts in| the indictment against Jelke, luv-J! ing him«to face the music for three | counts of compulsory prostitution. If convicted, Jelke could get 20 years on each count. » AFTER the summations late yes> terday, Judge Valente revoked Jel- ke's $50,000 bail and sent him to city prison for the night - a dras. | tic measure that took Jelke's lawy- er and Jelke, too, by surprise. | The judge acted on his own mo- tion without a request from Assis | tant District Attorney Samuel Lieb- | |ler. In his summation to the jury, Liebler revealed much of the tes timony which V - girls had given In secret. Valente barred reporters from the courtroom while the girls were on the stand last week . . . but Lieble tory of Jelke's ca - reer as m \procurer\ was told be- fore a crowded courtroom, Includ- Ing 40 newsmen. Jelke's lawyer, Sam Segal, de - 'clared in his summation that Mick-| ley \was framed\ to further the district altorney's political ambi- tons . . to which Liebler shouted | a denial, \If I framed Mickey Jelke,\ he! | |rick J. Jordan, 21, of Pauls Hotel, at the 25 - mere Bonghang Com» plex, containing 110 build- ings, open supply stacks and Communist bunkers and bar racks. Ammunition dumps or oll storage tanks were included. They saw the Songhang fires 28 miles away on their return fight. Meanwhile on the ground, Al- Med artillery fire crushed a 200- man Chinese assault on Korea's When they were Taxi Radio | The quick thinking of a tax! | icompany official and the speed of sound yesterday landed a holdup suspect in the hands of the law only minutes after $10 was taken from a Massapequa restaurant. Slated for arraignment in Min- eola District Court today was Pat- Hicksville Road, Massapequa. The magic of ether waves spelled defeat in crackling swift time for {Jordan, according to police. First Squad detectives said he walked 1n-i to the Mexicana Restaurant at m, Merrick Road, about 3:30 P. M.) Mrs. Christina Lehman of 51 Hud- son Avenue, Roosevelt, wife of the owner, was alone, She told police Jordan had his hand jammed in his pocket and told her it was a gun, He emptied the register of $70. | THE BANDIT then took a dime and went to the phone to call 2) Continued on Page 2 | Dancer to Appear In Red Probe LOB ANGELES (M- No sooner had dancer Libby Burke wound up her engagement at the Cocoanut Grove than she received a subpena esterday to appear before the House UN - American Activities] committee m Los Angeles next! month. Willinm Wheeler, special investi | gator for the committee, said the 32 - year - old Miss Burke had [March 8, west front while the battleship Missouri pounded shore batteries at Wonsan for the fourth straight day, The Red ground attack hit an Eighth Army outpost south « west of Kelly Hill under cover of heavy Communist artillery barrages. They were stopped cold. Some 35 Reds were reported dead or wounded. I eagerly accepted the tion to experience a \routise\ mission. They put me im the \idiot\ seat -- the tiny space in the cramped, instrument « jammed cockpit of a B-26 bomb» er behind the navigator, Second Lieutenant Daniel E. Draper of Terre Hill, Pa., veteran of 43 missions, was the navigator, Be- hind the guns in the ball turret bulging beneath the sleek fusel« age of the twin - engine bomber, was Airman First Class Pas quale Amato of Erle, Ps. Col. Napier with quiet skill lifted the warplane into the black night, through rain and clouds and out Into silvery moonlight near the 38th parallel. +00 > THERE WAS LIGHT and move- ment in the allied rear areas. Continued on Page 1¢ Baby Racket? US Says Yes, Canada, No! TORONTO (AP) - Officials investigating an alleged international baby black market disagreed today about its very existence as a childless Brooklyn couple claimed they paid nothing but $63.25 hospital bill for the infant they tried to take home with them. The couple, Mr. and Mre Jack Shinder, were arrested Wednesday as they prepared to board a New York - bound plane with a five - day - old baby not their own. They were charged with obtaining a birth certificate by fraud. Police officials then that with the arresis w; bad vered in Mega! baby farm that had shipped at least 20 infants into the 'United Btates for adoption in the last three months and possibly as 'many as 100 in the last year. They 'added that the bables were sold for $250 each, male or female, and sometimes resold in New York for as high as $2,000. MOST authorities who maintain- jed that such a farm existed re- fused to be quoted by name but Jacob Kershner of the United States Immigration Service de- clared: ''There is definitely a ring oper- ating for the purpose of buying ang selling bables.\ John Nimmo, assistant inspec- [tor of Toronto police detectives as- signed to the case, scoffed at this, asserting: \No baby ring is operating in this city.\ Nimmo said the only case he is working on is that of the hinders. He described as ''balderdash\ a New York report that as many as 1,000 babies had been illegally ex- ported to the United States for {adoption, The Brooklyn couple, now free on $2,000 bail each pending a told police they paid nothing for the child they had with them except the $63.25 hospi- tal bill owed for its birth, They told this story: «00% MRS. SENNDER, who had been told she could not have a child had tried to adopt a baby in Brook: lyn. The application was refected because Shinder's salary as a store clerk was too low and because [their three - room apartment was too. small. A friend In Toronto learned. of a 17 - year-old girl who was ex- |pecting a child. He met the expect- * Mass., AUGUSTA, Ga. (UM) - President Eisenhower today nominated (George V. Allen to be Ambassador to India and neighboring Nepal, and Livingston T. Merchant to be assistant secretary of state in charge of European affairs. He also formally submitted to the Senate the nomination of Charles E. (Chip) Bohlen as Am- bassador to Russia. Selection of Bohlen for the post was announced by the White House last week. He has been serving as State Depart- ment counselor and is an expert on Soviet affairs. «0% ALL THREE men Allen, Merchant and Bohlen -- are career diplomats, Allen has been Ambas- sador to Yugoslavia since 1940 land Merchant is deputy U. 8. special representative in- Europe, under William A. Draper. of Eisenhower's announcement the appoiptments came during the tizst full day of a brief vacation the President is spending here at [the Augusta National Golf Club. He also nominated three men for U.S. District Attorney posts -- his first appointments in these fields. «00% THEY ARE: J. Edward Lumbard Jr. of New York City, to be district attorney [for the southern distri¢t of New York State. . George E. Mackinnon of Maple Plain, Minn., to be district l“ ney for Minnesot- Anthony Julian of\ was“ to be district attorney for [Massachusetts, 2 Gunmen Steal $3,500 Payroll * Two gunmen disguised as labor been an organizer for the Commun- ant mother and made, ambushed a paymaster ima [ist party's special section in Al-'ments to take the baby, on pay- Shanty at a Little Neck Gard@® ameda County, Cllflom‘l I Continued on Pare 2 Continued on Page 1 THERE IS MORE THAN ONE WAY TO \DRUM UP\ BUSINESS and the best and least expensive way is thru the economical classi- fied ads. No matter what you have to sell you will get fastest re- sults thru a want ad. ~ Just Call An Experienced AD-TAKER & SAY CHARGE IT 3 LINES COST $1.20 For 1 DAY ROckvilie Contre 4-1800 Cop Brings Ole's Pup Home to Stage Door \Lucky mascot of the troupe, is well-named. Olseri and Johnson theatrical She's back home again with her master, Ole Olsen, at 50 Roosevelt Avenue, Malverne, thanks to George Wash- ington. Malverne Patrolman W illiam Caulin found the dug Sunday. Because Washington's Birthday was celebrated Monday, which meant the patrolman kept the dog at his a five-day vacation. dog pound wasn't open, the Merrick home, then started He didn't know Lucky's owner until he read about the animal's disappearance Since the lost dog's descri the patrolman brought tge night. in the Nassaw' Review-Star. tion tallied with Lucky's looks, dog to Johnson's house last As a result, the $25 reward offered for the do; s return will o to the Malverne Police Benevolent Patrolman Caulin turned it down. ‘npnrtmml project this morning wind stole a $3,500 payroll The robbers made a clean get- away from the Deepdale Gardens project now under censtruction, > Before they left, they lined ap a woman and sevef men the wall of the construction shaly. A Real Big Sports Section! : Where else the COM rm? Leng Tib- ugh-l picture but the Long. Inland L Nowhere, 'but nowhera't Basketball, bereball; wrasiling, A! h'nh. track, haul-ah ehdu‘ van?“ 0h- ad accuratel Vl seetien 1 the B16 $