OCR Text |
Show Grain Range Mav ... . July September Dec erald Journal lie Hi -- h Low Close 197 S 198' i ... 199 19U4 194i 192'. ..... 197 v 197 4 196 2u2W 203 201 li LOGAN. UTAH. MONDAY. MAY 17. 1954 45. NO. 116 VOL; The Weather Tuesday: Partly cloudy afternoon; otherwise fair; continued warm; high 88, low tonight 53.' FIVE CENTS urt Voids , V- ion In i", - j v - $M - 7 5 vvfc?r-1 Senator Favors WjSr hM$cc U.S. Warning For Red China h . H t : n 1 'iV Y1' V -''V,:3 U ?J . v , L ' w ML. ONE OF THE FIXE entries in Richmond Black and White Dairy show Saturday will be Ormsby Burke Lad Nellie, owned by Quentin Peart, left, general chairman of the show, and James T. Mutray, vice chiarman. The famous celebration is slated for Friday and Saturday. Richmond Black And White Show Is Friday, Saturday RICHMOND That more than Lman Rich, extension dairyman 250 black and white dairy cattle at Utah State Agricultural colwill be exhibited during Rich- lege. The junior - show will be con- mond Black and White Days celebration this weekend was the estimate today of Milton Webb, show secretary. ' A great deal of interest Is being shown by dairymen from various parts of Utah and Ida' ho, he said. All show committees have plans ready for the big exhibit. Some of the finest Holstein cattle in the west will be judged Friday, first day of the celebration. The dairy exhibit and judging PRESTON Whitney ward comprise main events for Friday, the family of Wayne Charwhile a horse show is scheduled joined and LaDean Foster Swainston les for Saturday. General chairman is Quentin in mourning the death by drowndaughPeart, serving for the fourth con- ing of their secutive year. James T. Murray ter, Kristi, which accident ocis vice chairman, with other curred about noon Sunday. directors being J. E. Erickson, .The child apparently tumbled Amos W. Bair, Herbert G. Taylor into an irrigation ditch which and E. J. Dennis. passes by the family home and Judge for the senior division is was carried through a culvert Cliff R. Knight of Bakersfield, crossing the road and south, for about 75 yards to where the water Calif. A new feature in the senior was running into an alfalfa field. Her body was found by an shpw this year is Stars of 1954 class. These cows will be judged-o- uncle, Conan Foster, who assisted search. production records, and the in the best cattle from the cow testing She had been playing with a associations in the valley will be little red wagon in the sand pile In the center ring. Assisting the only minutes before she was committee with this class is Prof. missed from the yard by her parents. A neighbor, who joined the search for the child, found the wagon lodged against the culvert. The stream passes the Whitney ward chapel. Kristi was born Sept. 25, 1952, at Preston. The parents have one other child, a daughter, Sheri, age 4 years. Surviving also are Utahs highway death toll jump- grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. ed to 62 with the deaths of a Charles Swainston and Mr. and Price, Utah, coal trucker today Mrs. Cecil Foster, of Whitney: and a Ogden youth and great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Condie, Preston. yesterday. Funeral services will be conJohnny Cop-fof Price was killed instantly ducted Tuesday, 2 p. m., in Whitthis morning when his loaded ney ward by Bishop Morris Poole. coal truck collided with another Friends may call at the Cecil truck on Utah highway 53 eight Foster home Monday evening and miles north of Price. Tuesday until "services. Burial The driver of the second truck will be in Whitney cemetery by was not identified and officers Webb mortuary. are continuing the Investigation. Copfer, an independent trucker, was the father of six children. The other fatality victim, old James Ashton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Ashton, Ogden, died last night at an Og-dehospital of injuries suffered earlier Sunday. Young Ashton was thrown off the running board of a car driven by another teenager when the vehicle hit a soft shoulder on the side of a gravel road southeast of Huntsville in Weber county. Witnesses said the boys head struck a fence post. He died about an hour after the mishap. Whitney Child Drowns In Irrigation Ditch Two Deaths Up Utah Road Toll er ducted along with senior divisions on the first day, directed by Grant Mauchley and Amos W, Bair. Assistant county agent, Wallace Sjoblom, is working with clubs of the valley. A judging contest among 4-- 4-- H members and Future Farmers will start the program in the junior department. Their cattle will be classified at 10 a.m. Friday. Mack Rasband of Ogden will be head man in the ring for the junior exhibitors. A entertainment will be held under the lights Friday, beginning at 8 p m., featuring some of the best talent in the valley. On Saturday morning, the horse show will be held, sponsored by the entertainment committee. Lamont Bair is chairman, with James T. Murray, director. Clarence Grant of Idaho Fails is judge fof the ' 15 'classes of horses. Team pulling matches are scheduled for 2 p.m. Saturday, with a dozen entries expected in each class. A celebration dance In Richtwo-ho- ur mond Community building Saturday evening concludes festivi- ties. Rides and concession stands will be on the grounds both days, officers stated. U. S. DeSEOUL, Korea (IP! fense Secretary Charles E. .Wilson conferred today with President Syngman Rhee after being briefed on military, political and economic problems in South Korea by top American officials here. Wilson is on tour of the Far East. He was accompanied at the conference by Gen. John E. Hull, U. S. Far East commander, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Eighth Army commander, U. S. Ambassador Ellis O. Briggs, and special envoy Arthur 11. Dean. nt LEWISTON LASS VIES FOR DAIRY DARLING - J 4.5 ' ' der arms. Utah Demos Candidate SALT LAKE CITY W 1954 Flu Utah Democrats are having a difficult time securing the services of a strong candidate to oppose Republican Douglas Stringfellow in the fall Congressional elections. The First district job has gone begging so far although several candidate have indicated they will be available for the Second district seat now held by Republican William A. Dawson. Former Democratic Representative Reva Beck Bosone has already announced her candidacy for the Second district. Other possible candidates include Provo attorney George S. Ballif and Salt Lake City attorney Warwick C. Lamoreaux both prominent in Democratic circles. Democratic leaders reportedly have been trying to induce three men to oppose Stringfellow in the first district race former Congressman Walter K. Granger, Cedar City, Heber Bennion Jr., Daggett county rancher and Judge Lewis Jones, Brigham 11 u 8 17 A UNCLE SAMS farm surplus Increases supply of wheat was being held by the U. S. government at the end of Feb. 1954, almost doublethe amount held during 1953, according to the National Industrial Conference Board. Above Newschart shows farm items held by the government during the two-ea- r period, and how long the supply of each would last at the present rate of consumption. The cotton stockpile grew from less than three months supply to almost a year supply, while butter rose from h a supply to almost three months. th half-mont- French Call Off 'Airlift Wounded' French high command today HANOI, Indohina (UP)-Th- e called off the mercy airlift of 1,300 wounded defenders of Dien Bien Phu and announed bombing of the area around the fallen fortress would resume at midnight. Angry suspension of the agreement to neutralize the area around Dien Bien Phu followed Communist refusal to evacuate native defenders and cease using cision to resume bombing had supply routes into the fortress. A high command spokesman not been made, the Communists said the Communists were using would have had time to transfer the plight of the wounded soldiers rebel shock troops to the Red River Delta, where Red activity to gain military advantages. been stepped up considerably has Union Only 11 French troopi had been airlifted to Hanoi from since the fall of Dien Bien Phu. the fallen fortress when monsoon rains made it impossible for the operation to continue. One of the evacuated troops, Cpl. Didier Lecompte, told UnitLouis ed Press Correspondent Guilert that the Angel of Dien Lt. Genevieve De Bien Phu, Gallard-Terraubwas still nursing the wounded when he left the fortress last Friday. lecomptes report was the first direct account received on the fate of the brave joung nurse, only woman at Dien Bien Phu during the 56 days of Communist siege. She was wonderful, always and cheerful as she smiling moved f first entrants In the Dairy Darling contest is Miss Helen Titensor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Titensor, WINS TITLE OF MISS UTAH Lew iston. OGDEN (W Eighteen-year-ol- d Maurine Parker of Ogden, Utah, today began making pre parations to represent the state In the annual Miss Universe contest at Long Beach, Calif., in iK U1J. Miss Parker, a senior at Weber high school, was acclaimed to be Y; ej CANDIDATE FOR Cache Dairy Darling honors Is Miss Helen Titensor of Lewiston. She previously has been Miss Lewiston. the most beautiful girl in the state at the Miss Utah contest in Salt Lake City over the weekend. A daughter of Mr. and Mrs. iH. R. Parker. Maurine said she hopes to enroll at Brigham Young university in the fall and major in dramatics and home econom- Get Heavy Rains around Heavy thundershowers, coming in the wake of scattered tornadoes, soaked the plains states from the Pecos Valley to Western Nebraskas wheat and cattle country today. Meantime, flood waters that rushed into the coastal town of Peabody, Mass., yesterday when from one bed to a wooden mill pond dam broke the next and doing everything began to drop after doing damage in her power to make us rest which may reach a million lars. Lecompte said At least six tournadoes were reThe high command charged that the Communists had refus- ported seen in the Southwest last dol-easi- OGDEN BEAUTY U Plains States e, ed to allow evacuation of seriwounded native Viet Nam-es- e ously So far, however, none of the troops, including many In would three have indicated they condition. critical care to try for the job. This Communist recalcitrance On the Republican side there and the slowness of evacuation has been no indication that either methods Imposed by of the incumbents will be opposed caused by led to the high comReds the in the primaries. mands decision to renew bombardment of the area. Spokesmen said that if the de- - One of the basketball team from that ward. Girls of the Valley are invited to enter the Dairy Darling conthe state test. Incidentally, Darling competition will be staged this June in Logan during the great Dairy Month celebration. An entry blank appears nightly In The Herald Journal. Icytid o The Su- WASHINGTON tin ruled Court today in an preme historic decision that racial seqie-gatlin public schools is unconstitutional. for a unanimous Speaking court. Chief Justice Earl Warren said education must be available to all on an equal basis. The decision, a sweeping victory for Negroes, is probably the most important in U. S. race relations since the famous Died Scott decision of 1857, which held that a Negro was not a citizen. The Civil War reversed that decision. Equal Protection Clause ' Warren said because of the ramifications of the decision, formulation of specific decrees will be delajed until further arguments have been heard. But the court by Warren's opinion today laid down the rule that segregation is a denial of equal protection of the laws to Negroes. This Is the phraseology of the 14th amendment to the Constitution, on which the Negroes relied in bringing their cases. Today's decision was taken In four cases brought originally in four states South Carolina, Virginia, Delaware, and Kansas. 17 Slates Affected Some 9,000,000 white and 2,650,-00- 0 Negro children attend separate schools In 17 states and the District of Columbia. Arizona, Kansas, New Mexico and Wyoming also have segregation in some localities. The momentous ruling Invalidates many provisions in state constitutions, laws and administrative regulations in the 17 states which now require segregation. The ruling, a document that will rank in sociological significance with Lincoln! Emancipation Proclamation, swept aside the "separate but equal doctrine laid down by the Supreme Court night, but none of them did significant damage or caused any injuries. Two of the twisters were seen near Lovington, N. M and another was spotted near Trinidad, Colo. Two tornadoes, which did not touch ground, were reported near Cushing, Okla., and another unconfirmed report said a, a sixth twister passed near Okia. Wa-tong- in 1896. Further Arguments Under that doctrine, the trbunal has held in the past that Negroes must be given educational facilities equal to those afforded white students but that the facilities could be separate. The courta decision not to Issue the specific decrees at this time was apparently in recognition of the complexity "of the Issue and the physical difficulties involved in putting the ruling into effect. Warrent said further arguments will be heard, presumably In the fall, before the decrees are for- mulated. Warren said that historical data inconclusive as to the proved intent of the ramers of the 14th Amendment. Warren said, however, that in approaching this problem, we cannot turn the clock back to 1868 when the amendment was adopted, or even to 1896 when Plessy vs. Ferguson was written. Plessy vs. Ferguson was the cahe that established the separwhich ate but equal doctrine Aegroes have been fighting for 30 years to set aside. Present Conditions We must consider public education in the light of its full development and Its present place in American life throughout the nation. Only in this way can it be determined if segregation In public schools deprives these complainants of the equal protection of the laws. Today, education Is perhaps the most important function of state and local government. . . Chieftain Of Philippines Red Guerillas Surrenders MANILA, P. I. HP Luis Tame, the Philippines public enemy No. 1 and leader of the Communist Hukbalahaps, came out ol the hills today and surrendered to the government. The balding chieftain of the Red guerilla group that soecial-ize- d in wholesale slaughter by ambush until they were reduced to disorganized gangs by President Ramon Magsaysay, then defense secretary, two years ago, ics. claimed he gave himself up to She is an accomplished cook, join the government. makes her own clothes and can Tame passed through the front ride a horse and rope cattle Ikes with Lenigno Aquino, a correspondent for the Manila Times t ' 'r. on W massive seale. ' iVital Problem 104 Risk Russia Retaliation Knowland conceded American Intervention might risk Russian retaliation and global war But he said Red Chinas invasion would lead to the conquest of all Asia and I dont believe it would be in our national interest to permit the balance of Asia to pass into Communist hands. The California Republican. Influential GOP spokesman on Far Eastern affairs, gave this assessment of the alternatives in a raCBS dio interview Leading Question Sunday. Knowland, insisting there must in Southeast be no Munich Asia, said the United States should press forward with its alliance withproposed out waiting for India. Indonesia, Burma and other Asian neutrals to join. I think it is highly unlikely that presently at least they will join in such a . pact, he said. And if we wait for them to make up their minds, I am afraid that all of Southeast Asia will go down the drain. Knowland also proposed that and Nationalist South Korea China be invited to join the alliance, saying that betwen them they have over 1,100,000 men un- J 1. t 7 Decision On u City. 1953 Cache Helen is a junior at North Cache high school, where she is prominent in campus activities. She was a cheer queen in junior high school, and also at North Cache. An arid sports fan, she also is a vocalist in the school chorus, and a member of Lewiston Fourth ward. She was a member of Benson stakfe championship on a Wilson Confers With Korea Chief Seek 16-ye-ar 4 M Sen Vil-liaWASHINGTON HP F. Know land savs that if Red China invades Indoihma the United States may have to inter-- , vene with sea and air power even if it means war with Russia The Senate Republican leader said it would be a great mis- take to send U. S. troops into the battle zone for this would be like trying to cover an elephant with a handkerchief. But lie said this country has air and sea superiority and rould not sit idly by if the Chinese Communists entered the fighting W U V WRHMPMini T m , Thirty-one-year-o- ld Gives Historic Months of Supply Mi: 0 cho too fast Actress Margaret OBrien, now 17, adjusts an earring as she leaves Superior Judge Victor R. Hansens court In Los Angeles. The judge told the former child star and her mother, Mrs. Gladys OBrien, that money earned childhood during Margarets was being spent too fast in proportion to current earnings, lie said court approval must bo obtained for expenditures over SPENDING $500. Chief's Order Puis Probe Staff in Dither WASHINGTON (IP) President Eisenhower today ordered government employes not to tell Army-McCarth- y invest! gators anything about conferences purely within the executive branch. The action threw the investigating subcommittee into an uproar and left its future course in doubt. Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy attacked the order and said, I do not think the President is responI dont think his judgsible ment is that bad." Calls It Iron Curtain McCarthy refused to put any mote questions to Army witnesses until. the subcommittee held an executive session and decided whether to submit to the order. He said the order drew an iron curtain over efforts to determine who was really responsible for the pressure charges against himself and his staff members. Army officials as had originally been thought, or higher-upThe committee thereupon voted to hold a closed session at 1:30 p. m. to consider the problem, and to resume public sessions at 3 p. m. The President issued his order just before the start of todays session after discussing it with Republican con- -, gressional leaders at the White House. The leaders raised no objections to it. Mr. Eisenhower said he was Is suing the order to preserve the principle of separation of powers among the three branches of government. He said this separation is necessary to keep any one branch from seizing arbitrary power. The immediate effect was to prevent Army Counselor John G. Adams from testifying further about a Jan. 21 huddle on the quarrel by high administration figures gathered at the Justice Department. ... s. Army-McCart- Army-McCart- Britain Delays Joining Alliance Prime Minister LONDON (!?! said today Churchill said Winston authorities nobody Army recently. Tames surrender climaxed would receive the $50,000 reward that Britain will not commit itdecampaign offered for the apprehension of self to join a Southeast Asian GeMagsaysays long the after uutil alliance or because he dead but the the fense alive, presiHuks, Tame, against neva Conference. surrendered voluntarily. . v dent refused to see him. He said that after the conferTame was taken to the Camp Negotiations for Tames surBritain would be willing to and on ence had been for carried render Murphy army headquarters, three months through his son turned over to Army Chief of examine the proposal for creaRomeo, who was captured by the Staff Major Gen. Jesus Vargas, tion of a Sortheast Asian defense army last year, and Manuel who introduced the fallen Huk alliance. The Prime Minister, In an adto Mrs. Vargas. Manahan. I am here because of your dress ot the House of Commons, Government sources said no deal bad been made with Tar-u- e, children and my children. Taruc did not rule out currert multary . but it was believed he might told the chief of staffs wife talks by existing staff agnch-rd he first the insisted, can But. we is doubtful conditional whether a It been have !y promised pardon if he would help the army have peace in ICO years if I did is to achieve peace in lihutma through the Geneva peg j JxU. a. get the rest of his men to sur not give up. who had interviewed him twice render. , |