Show THE WEATHER OGDEN: Fair tomorrow little change in temperature low tonight 58 UTAH: Mostly fair thunderstorms in southeast high 105 4 J ' high 95 TEMPERATURES luttt 4 TELEPHONE EX No 202 OGDEN UTAH FRIDAY EVENING 4-77- 11 1 a WA7 r— v Proposal Q'peini i - 0"" V st BROADEST CHALLENGE — The Western disarmament toplan presented to Russia day by John Foster Dulles represented the greatest chal-in lenge issued by the West 11 years of arms cut talks BIG CONCESSION The Dulles plan went much further than the original open skies plan first proposed by President Eisenhower at the Geneva sum- mit conference July 21 1955 — It includes all of Canada instead of just the US and the Soviet Union a big concession —It also might include all of Europe from Ireland on the west to Russia's Ural Mountains in the east This means the whole of Western Europe about 1400-00- 0 square miles in return for FHA Interest acted to SEEN FROM S Soon WASHINGTON (AP) — other increase in FHA home loan interest rates is imminent confrom 5 to 5 per cent in the interest rate to be announced soon along with approval of lower down payments and new controls on the amount' of discount — or premium — which may be charged borrowers on mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration No time was mentioned in con nection with the rate increase but reports were current that an announcement might be made before September Firm loan commitments already made presumably would not be affected ) NO COMMENT tive home buyers was authorized and imposition of sharply lower orceilings on discounts washousnew in dered by Congress ing legislation signed July 12 by President Eisenhower The discounting practice which has spread rapidly during the credit pinch means the builder receives less than the f ace value of a homeowner's mortgage when he transfers that mortgage to abank The bank deducts a certain amount to compensate for the fact that earnings on mortgages may be less than the interest available through over investments Three Billion Ear-Mark- ed had objected to including all Soviet- territory under open skies the new plan provided an alternate For the Zone it would substitute the Arctic Circle an area including sections of Canada Alaska Danish Greenland and northern Norway as well as Arctic Russia and all of Alaska a border strip of Canada and Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula and Kurile Islands If one of these zones is accepted then the West will accept the Soviet proposal for a European zone with the provision that it include a "significant part of the territory of the Soviet Union as well as the other countries of Eastern Europe" - SAN (AP) — north of here amateur astronoFrom southern California to Port- mer William Abbey said the brilland Ore from Salt Lake City to liant bluish-greeobject was travthe coast western skies last night eling north when it disintegrated glowed to the light of a hurtling in the northeast section of the object or objects sky That would place it near The main one — if there was Yreka 50 miles in that direction more than one — appeared to disThere were sightings in the area reported in Salt integrate overYreka Calif near an made Lake City Boise Mountain Home the Oregon border It over all heard Siskiyou Payette and Rexburg explosion It was described as a dazzling County Most observers thought it was fireball over Western Oregon and a meteor It was seen about 9:30 was visible for 10 seconds before it burst into streamers of red pm In Eureka Calif 250 miles flame Paul Ryman of radio station KUGN in Eugene said he watched the fireball for 10 seconds before d it vanished in a burst of n ED— John McNif f executive secretary of the Association of Catholic Trade Unionists HAVANA (AP) — President Fulgencio Batista's Army held Cuba under strict military rule today following an demonstration in the anti-Batist- a pro-reb- el city of Santiago de Cuba Comments on the demonstration and the situation in Cuba by Earl E T Smith the new U S ambassador brought a fusillade of criticism from po- litical leaders loyal to the Pres' ident Batista's cabinet suspended constitutional guarantees for 45 days and immediately directed the Army to take control of Santiago capital of Oriente prova ince and a hotbed of sentiment A general strike" had been called in the city to protest police action in dispersing WedMost nesday's demonstration places of business were closed although police forced some food stores to reopen Port operations were halted and banks were shut d ear-marke- The $2875000000 apportioned to the various states includes 2 billion dollars to continue work network of on the 41000-mil- e access limited superhighways These interstate highways will link 90 per cent of all cities with a population of 50000 or more The program calls for their completion in about 16 years For Utah 54417613 for primary roads $2921387 for secondary $927667 for urban and $19336422 for interstate The bill earmarks $4779420 to Idaho for primary roads for secondary roads '$421341 for urban roads and $20247359 for interstate $3-3666- INDEX 6B 7B 9A 4A SB 7B V 4fi 5B A 3B 8B 1 OA 11 A 43 ARRIVED JULY 25 Smith arrived in Cuba July 25 to take over as ambassador and the Santiago demonstration obviously was timed to coincide with a visit he is making to that city The demonstrators mostly women dressed in black paraded through the streets singing the national anthem Police broke up the rally with fire hoses and made some arrests Smith told a news conference later the American people "are sad and preoccupied by the political uneasiness that has reached the point of bloodshed in Cuba" He added that he feared "some persons made use of my presence to demonstrate in protest against their own government" and expressed hope that the arrested women would be freed According to one account reported to the Communications Ministry Smith also said "any form of excessive police action is repugnant to me" Supporters of Batista were quick to assail the ambassador's remarks as "improper and n n it en 3 J3 ri r lum-controll- ed 24 of 1 Exploitation i Of Workers WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Rackets Committee today called in a group of New York they City workers to show how hoodluallegedly were exploited by unions and cooperating employers Chairman McClellan said in advance it would be shown that "sweetheart contracts" (D-Ar- k) between the unions and employers gave the workers only the le- gal minimum wage Today's hearings are a new phase of the committee's probe into New York area unions dominated by labor racketeer Johnny Dio described as a close friend of James R Hoffa powerful Teamsters union boss Previous testimony has brought out that Dio got! the unions started as part of the old AFL United Auto Workers Union but since has switched them into the Teamsters Union McClellan said Wednesday that Hoffa used Dio: to help gain labor domination ?over New York and the eastern seaboard In that statement McClellan also said - LABORERS MISUSED "It will be shown that the il- - so-call- ed ed Yank Harangues Muscovites About Virtues of 55 mills over 1956 y Rumor of I Q100 Here ar : j Mc-Clella- t n's "its-bac- ll j long-standin- -- DOG TIRED This must be the little guy that all those things that shouldn't happen to a dog did The "best friend" who appears to need Albino Pekingese It's a tough a pal is "Linda" a life or maybe it's just the heat in New York City The Senate late last night passedby a vote of 51 to 42 an amendment guaranteeing jury cases of criminal trial in ' of court 3 provision opposed flatly by the President and Senate GOP leader William F -c- ontempt Knowland After discussing the Senate action with his Cabinet this morning the President said the interposition of a jury trial between a federal judge and his legal orders would "weaken our whole judicial system and particularly the prestige of the federal ' HOUSE MAY BALK "In this case it will also make largely ineffective the basic purpose of the bill — that of pro- tecting promptly end effectively Mafniiic every American in his right to vote" he said j House Republican leaders said Senate amendments probably have killed the chances for enactment of any civil rights law this year win noi aciney saia ine nouseamendment the cept jury trial especially when coupled with earlier Senate action to confine the bill to voting rights only Some Republican congressmen predicted that the House would refuse to go along with the Senate's changes in conference committee Both of Utah's Republican senators Arthur V Watkins and Wallace F Bennett voted against the jury trial amendment ! 1 DeVofo spuve F ©res f (AP) — Sen and Sen got into a Neuberger dispute in the Senate Friday over Neuberger's suggestion for renaming a national forest in Idaho WASHINGTON Dworshak (R-Idah- o) (D-Or- e) ' i I tirs Ssridf © Dworshak accused Neuberger of trying to "impose his will upon the people of my state" with j his proposal for chahging the name of the Clearwater National Forest to the Bernard DeVoto National Forest in memory of the late author Dworshak said the people of his state would prefer inat n on berger concentrate his forests in Oregon renaming leaving Jdahoans free to "tts en the colorful names of Ida- ho areas that are - of en linked with historic events" eu-effo- MOTHER ASKS $5002S8 FOR 'SCALPING' SON r Pa (AP) — A mother has asked $500298 damages for a 'scalping" son given her Mrs Paul Eppley filed the suit in Common Pleas Court on behalf of her son Theodore against Francis J Zimmerman and his wife op- erators of the Green Valley YORK 17-year-- k ! til federal judicial system In one of the strongest statements to come from the White House in this administration Eisenhower said that rarely in the legislative history of the United States had so many extraneous issues been introduced in Senate debate "in order to confuse both legislators and the public' d " literate Puerto Rican and Negro Dio-dominat- Ogden City Council last night raised city property taxes nearly per cent increasing the tax levy from 215 to 27 mills — a' jump health center are largely responsible new levy which the Under must still be approved by the Utati State Tax Commission city property taxes on a $10000 home Would be about $54 (For each mill the property owner pays $1 on each $ltK)0 worth of assessed property he owns In Utah property is as1 sessed at roughly 20 per cent of its actual value) The Council adopted the highA Brigham Young Univerer levy after City Manager E J out that sity official said today the Allison again pointed the city has the perplexing prob- BYU will offer a number of lem of paying for the past presextension courses in religion ent and future all at once a of are taxes only part City but put to rest here this the total property owners pay a rumor year that the institution The county school district sewer district water district and a had more extensive educahost of others also levy property tion plans in the works for taxes The levy is 35 mills higher Ogden A similar denial was issued than the council expected to set when it approved the city budget some months ago by President Erlast year At that time the city nest L Wilkinson who spiked a manager listed in the budget ex- then current rumor that the BYU pected revenue of $19958219 from state aid The last legisla- planned to establish a two-ye' ture however failed to assist church college here municipalities financially Making today's disclosure was TWO ALTERNATIVES Harvey Taylor executive iassistant in Allison E J to President Wilkinson who spoke City Manager his accompanying message said in the president's absence He this left the city two alternatives: said the program planned for Ogcutti ng employes' wages-oriinwill be patterned after one den ing another means of financing set up in Rexburg Idaho a year the budget He and the Council agreed that ago wage cuts would not be fair or In most respects it will be simijust "and in fact would not be lar to extension division work which has been offered in Ogden prscticsl Of the total 23 mills was to for a number of years by both the cover the deficit resulting from University of Utah and Utah State the Legislature's failure to pro- University vide some relief and the other 2 - PRIMARILY RELIGIOUS mills was to cover the expense However the curriculum will of constructing the combined be center health primarily religious at first If In his message Mr Allison ac- the demand develops other acacused the state legislature of demic ' subjects will be added upon the cities from time to time turning Mr Taylor flatly denied a ruand instead of taking action to help the cities adopted legisla- mor that a "residence" program tion which increased the financ- was to be set up here which would permit students to comial burdens of the cities auwas "No additional revenue plete their upper division work thorized and the antiquated prop- and receive a degree without ever erty tax levy statutes were left leaving Ogden Under the extension division unchanged" diwas mills 27 of The total program students may earn a levies number of credits but cannot 13 for into vided separate "funds" various city qualify for a bachelor's degree 5 mills is without spending a given number Biggest single levy for public safety (police and fire of hours at the parent institution departments) and next largest The same will hold true of the was 35 mills for interest on in- BYU program Mr Taylor said debtedness Exactly when the classes will A three-milevy was made begin has' not been worked out in for contingent expenses streets detail but presumably the first and sidewalks and city hall and courses will be open this year In fact BYU is already offering memorials Two mills were levied for some training at the Institute of parks sewer and drains and pub- Religion on the lower campus Mr Taylor also announced that lic affairs and finance Others direcinclude construction and main- BYU will choose a full-tim-e tenance of utilities 150 mills tor to administer the extension city auditors expense 50 mill courses under the general superrecreation 75 mill libraries 25 vision of Dr Harold Glenn Clark mill and airport maintenance dean of the college extension division 50 mill the Council highadopted City Apparently the college had laid considerable ground work before er levy unanimously Delbert Poole was excused deciding to o p e n extension from the meeting early and Courses Mr Taylor said he and Councilman B M Richards was Dean Clark met with President William P Miller at Weber Colexcused entirely) The higher tax rate the high- lege last winter to discuss the est ever set in Ogden brought idea and let him know BYU's a brief - discussion on municipal plans Meetings have also been held taxing with the various LDS Church REACHED LIMIT stake presidents in the Ogden Councilman Austin Seager said area Though classes at the beproperty taxes have "a b out ginning will be primarily religion reached their limit" He said he classes other subjects would be de- probably be taught at a later hoped new tax sources can of some the date to unload veloped burden from property owners EXTENSION COURSE Now cities are limited by state Once extension classes have laws in the way they may raise revenue He suggested that per- been established in Ogden on the haps a city income tax would be lower Weber College campus BYU could easily expand beyond a good solution J y City Manager Allison said that the confines of the Institute of some cities have as many as nine Religion Building The lower campus Moench different tax sources though genconare six Building and the College Gymseriously erally only ' nasium building will most certainsidered One of the easiest of these to ly revert to the LDS Church ung arrangement administer he said is the sales der a tax He said a personal income with the state The property origtax is logical and is used in many inally belonged to the church and it was agreed the church would cities a Mr Seager asked about gross own them again if the state receipts tax and the city man- stopped using the facilities for ager said it would be possible junior college work Mr Taylor said that "naturally "if you could get support for it" the subject of what to do with But he advised it would be too the Moenth Building and the late this year regardless 1 per cent sales Gym when and if they are reA state-wid- e tax for municipalities would solve turned to the church has been most of the city's financial prob- discussed but no decision has been reached lems Mr Allison commented city-count- Laid to Dio m-run WASHINGTON (UP) — President Eisenhower today called the Senate's jury trial amendment to his civil rights bill "bitterly disappointing" and a threat to the entire A general 10 per cent salary increase for all city employes and an expanded capital improvement program including the new laborers were misused by both management and labor "The racketeers in effect sold out the union members and gained the cooperation of management in organizing plants by giving them easy or which 'sweetheart contracts contained little or no benefits to employes" Robert F Kennedy the comRymaii said the fireball was at some of the bluish-white first a then got mittee's counsel said contracts with brighter and finally turned par- employers having locals also may be tially red before "an actual called for testimony today as well as a number of New York extracworkers of Puerto' Rican ' tion McClellan announced yesterday the rackets committee has f oundr out that Teamsters union dues money apparently was used U S to pay a $2166 hotel bill here in mid-Jul- y for former heavyJoe Louis — weight champion MOSCOW (UP) Anthony That was when the famed Quintain 23 Seattle) delivered a "Brown Bomber" visited Washsoapbox oration in Red Square ington and attended Hoffa's trial last night about America's free- on charges of bribing one of committee investigators dom and high living standard Louis put his arm around Hoffa For two and a half hours he in the courtroom and described lectured several hundred startled him as friend" The good "my Muscovites on a variety of Suband four of Negroes eight jury jects including America's attitude white later on Hungary He spoke in Russian persons acquitted Quintain was here for the Mos- Hoffa but the jurors said in a cow Youth Festival afterwards the race issue Police didn't interrupt Quin- poll influenced their verdict not had tain's soapbox oration although come down they did ask him to Lenin-Stalin off the steps of the Warns Nation Faces Mausoleum that dominates the square Asian Flu Outbreak His audience was generally poWASHINGTON (AP) — This lite Some Muscovites smiled incredulously Others heckled him country faces the "very definite occasionally with the inevitable probability" of a large outbreak "How about the Negro problem?" of Asian influenza this fall or They also challenged the Ameri- winter Surgeon General LeRoy can practice of fingerprinting E Burney says r two-year-o- ld Calls Jury Trial Approval Blow at Judicial System City Manager Blames State Legislature For Failing to Provide Fund Relief told senators today that hood- labor unions and employers have conspired to exploit Puertoin Rican New and Negro workers WIREPHO-TO) York City (AP red-tinge- WASHINGTON (AP) — The government today nearly 3 billion dollars to be snpnt on the national highway program ina the 12 months start down ing m mid-lyo- Editorial Page Obituaries Radio-TPrograms Sports Theater Vital Statistics Women's Pages zones covered by open skies SUBSTITUTE PLAN But because Russia previously FRANCISCO anti-Batist- For Road Work Comics Community Page ground inspection International inspection posts would be set up at ports railway centers road junctions and air fields in all the PORTLAND Under Strict Military Rule 95 57 64 57 106 65 70 53 92 69 n o Oode n rrop©r?y xes Go Up AS most 24 off-shoo- ts There was no immediate comment from housing officials A reduction in FHA down payment requirements for prospec- f"""x 53 57 1 SAYS WORKERS EXPLOIT- all of Eastern Europe and Euroabout 2800000 pean Russia square miles — It accepts Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin's demand for azzun irbol! Lights W esfern Sky An- gressional sources said today They said they expect a boost I TO n 1 in 11 years of stalemated arms cut talks V' © &1 S5 7 a - five-pow- er The western plan included flexible clause offering smaller compressed zones in Europe and North America if Russia balks at throwing open all its vast territory Dulles presented the plan on behalf of the United States Britain Canada and France with a plea that experts begin "at once" to draw up detailed blueprints He said Soviet acceptance of these sleeping safeguards would help against surprise attack concreate the kind of East-Wearms fidence needed for further cuts and settlement of major international disputes o - Mix 106 5 'CENTS r Iff wmfrrt Mx I LONDON (UP)—The western powers offered today to open all of Europe and North America to Soviet air and ground inspectors if Russia will admit the West to all Soviet territory U N The sweeping plan presented to the Disarmament Conference by Secretary of State John Foster broadest challenge yet issued by the West Dulles was-th-e I Ff 58 Phoenix 43 Pocatello 3S Provo 72 Salt Lake 65 San Francisco SO St George 52 Seattle (Washington 2 SECTIONS r 0 83 95 109 93 95 Logan Los Angeles n I 75 Chicago Denver Las Vegas 24 PAGES AUGUST 2 1957 i 95 80 Boise low 55 88th YEAR Minl Max Ogrfeit Swimming Pool The action charged that while her son was at the r pool a group of boys held him as Zimmerman administered a "Don Eagle" haircut Don "who has Eagle is a wrestler o hair-dy an Indiaiftype was The suit charges a strip of Icftjwitg "only an hair in unsightly appearance through the center of the scalp" 'The haircut was administered in a spirit of fun and with the full permission of the youth" Zimmerman's attorney said The action asked for $5000 damages and $293 to re- place her son's shirt Mrs Eppley says was torn at the time - i rts OF OGDEN Neuberger said he would be "proud" to have an Oregon for- n est renamed in honor 'of an of such literary imnortance as DeVoto a native of Ogden NATIVE Ida-hna- Utah Neuberger said that at last request his ashes were recently scattered over the Lolo Trail in the Clearwater Forest which embraces a Lewis and dark trail where he did much research for his writing It would be fitting and T" 1 t t proper i10 rename ilHie xuie&t je- Voto Neuberger argufed Dworshak replied: "If an Idaho citizen requests De-Vot- — iti appropriate e's -- 1 3 1 receptabl? in Port- low that the name of Portland should be changed to that of the person whose ashes were buried there" ' j vt Neuberger recently had placed in The Congressional Record an editorial from the Ogden Standard-Examine- r July 21 issue C how J Olsen then describing in forester Ogden hired regional a plane to scatter DeVoto's ashes on the Lochsa River in Northern Idaho He did so at the request Sen of Mrs DeVoto N j NAMES IN THE NE A concert by opera star Maria Callas vas canceled in Athens Greece last night because some members of the audience were f reported ready to shower the stage with tomatoes The Athens Festival announced the cancellation less than an hour before the curtain was due to rise saying the fiery singer was suffering from a sore throat It was believed police had refused to guarantee order because of reports that Miss Callas would be booed and chased from the stage by tomatoes There has been widespread criticism of the singer for accepting a $9000 fee for two concerts Newspaper critics also carried reports she allegedly refused to give financial aid to her mother has quit a new London show because American singing star Charlie Grade is getting top' bill- ing - ' "It's disgraceful that a British star should be treated this way" declared Miss Squires who is 39 "I shall sue my theatrical agents "And who is this Charlie Grade anyway?" Dorothy who recently returned to England after four years in the United States said she was promised joint top billing with Gracie in the show opening at the London Hippodrome Monday Singer Freddye Marshall will take her place Gracie recording star is on his way to England aboard the "Liner Mauretanh He told a British reporter over the phone that he was surprised Miss Singer Rosemary Clooney has Squires had never heard of him given birth prematurely to a "I cant say I've ever heard of son in Santa Monica her he added J Calif The child was expected in October Former Sen Walter F George Miss Clodney wife of actor Jose Ferrer was in good condi- in Vienna Ga is gradually gettion at St John's Hospital The ting weaker and losing ground baby named Gabriel Vincente fast in his fight against heart was placed in an incubator after disease That was the report tohis birth Thursday His condition day of Dr Martin L Malloy the was described as hopeful It was George family physician for 25 statesman years The their third child has been gravely ill sines British crooner Dorothy Squires I ld nd " ld |