Show MOM EXCHANGE THE WEATHER Mrs Reva Beck Bosone would exchange U S mothers with Russia in a move to improve U relations See Page 6 A !J H n (1 ! i(i N i S-R- No 340 TELEPHONE EX j-- f - - 4-77- OGDEN UTAH THURSDAY EVENING 11 M t ) AM 1 j j 15 DECEMBER 19 1957 40 PAGES 3 SECTIONS 5 CENTS o p - I H — 1 I d - ( night 86th YEAR 4 ijli II OGDEN: Light snow tomorrow low tonight 24 high tomorrow 42 UTAH: Considerable cloudiness light snow High 45 low to- i L U Li V vrJ 4 ( i n ill! (J j iM I u Li —j Li ( rJ I i 1 J d y j - j r I ( I f tj y v3 ' -- J ji WMv A 4 if 1 7X P J vi j ILli Li XJ 3) SUBS FOR 700 9 Dig in Parii RUSS BY 761 JANE'S SHIPPING REPORTS Ji 1 Cr3 v u bit ©liMtD iiiiy w in feJsiCiiyio On missiles Know-Ho- w LONDON (INS) —The authoritative Jane's Fighting Ships reported today that by 1981 Russia will have 700 submarines some of them nuclear-powereand capable of firing hydrogen-arme- d missiles deep d f' r f!s n I w F Yf 2 jr ill i'lirif U-bo- Unseasoned Twister Leaves More Than 100 Injured aisiiiiiiiii A LIGHT COVER OF SNOW mantled northern Utah and the Onden valley today ai zivun un uib axea iate esieraay ine weatner Diireau lorecast says anf other is on its way " AND COLDER TOO 4a? mJ Xtfl !rtfo Sfcy - A brief blast of winter hit northern Utah yesterday leaving a light cover of snow in the Ogden valley and icy coating on many highways and streets The weather forecast is for another storm by nightfall The storm dumped Tax Formula I Wpt 1 M lola to 2V2 inches CAPE CANAVERAL Ha (AP) The Air Force successfully launched its Thor intermediate range ballistic missile today e The huge missile left its launching stand at about 12:57 pm (MST) in a flash of orange light It climbed straight upward for several seconds then gently eased over into a high climbing arc toward the southeast A minute after takeoff the weapon began to leave a vapor trail Its course could be easily followed in the clear sky its exhaust a bright reddish orange against the blue ud above The flame of the rocket was visible for more than two min- snow-whit- mid-afterno- on : Weber- Aides A new assessment of real property— principally in urban areas — will begin Jan 1 under a new formula which takes into account present market values Selvov Beyer Salt Lake City Utah State a oa ummission memoer in charge of tax equalization said today Mr Boyer appeared with Bruce Jenkins Weber County assessor at a regular meeting of the Weber County commission to inform commissioners formally of the start of the year-lonprogram Three real estate men will take special training for the program Mr" Boyer said NEW FORMULA The new formula provides that the assessment shall be 50 per cent of the current sale value then 40 per cent of that half The net figure amounts to approximately 20 per cent of the rated sale value Mr Boyer said that state law of real esrequires tate each five years Weber County appraisals have not been redone for six years he said This will be the first application of the new formula Apprais--al- s for many years have been based on the 1940 sale value of 1 1 propr-t- y largely completed duringthe past year in Salt Lake Davis- and Utah Counties Mr Royer said No important changes have resulted "where fair appraisals have been made before" he added WILL EXPLAIN He said that he or other members of the state commission or County assessor's office would be happy to accept invitations to speak before civic groups if any concern is felt about the impact of the Older properties do not necessarily get increased appraisals in comparison with new properties the visitor explained has-bee- n - A "rash of accidents" involving mostly minor property damage were reported this morning by the Utah Highway Patrol sta tion at Hot Springs Troops said the highways were extremely slippery during the' night and early morning hours but sanding crews had covered ites most nigh ways by midmorninj? I he rocket disannparpd frnm and the ice was expected to start sisht in the distance This was the eighth test firing breaking up" by noon One icy road mishap involved a °f a Thor Of the seven previous school bus launchings three were entirely A Weber County school bus successful The Army a fiery serving elementary schools in the West Weber area collided with thundering Jupiter IRBM last a snowplow a quarter mile west just one day after the Air of Utah Highway 84 about 8:45 Force had made a successful test a m shooting of its Atlas interconti- cental missile Trooper Arthur Spendlove of the Utah State Highway Patrol' It was reported here today that and J F King Weber County the Atlas firing yielded so much deputy sheriff who investigated useful data that the next shoot sesiu st'iiuus iniunes micnt haveivUi HUl uc atuuuuitu uuui next resulted if the bus had been car- month Last night's Jupiter firing was rying its normal load of more than 60 young children spectacular From the moment of flaming SECOND TRIP The bus had unloaded one takeoff until the torch dimmed group of children and was on its out high in a starry sky some four way to pick up a second group minutes later it appealed to be a when the mishap occurred most successful launching Officers said that the bus drivBut the defense department en by Herbert Heslop 54 West Weber was following a countv said later that the missile failed snowplow working west on 1800 to complete its full flight because bouth of technical difficulties The snowplow blade struck What that meant in terms of gravel and the machine was slowed down The bus was unable range speed and accuracy was to stop because of icv road and not explained collided with the rear of the MOST SPECTACULAR county machine The Jupiter is an intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) I N D E designed to deliver a nuclear warhead up on a target 1500 miles 14 A 15 A distant In one launching a Community Comics 11C Jupiter traveled 2200 miles Editorial Page It is one of the most spectac$ Obituaries ular of all the missiles in the 1315 Radio-T12B volume of light heat and noise Programs 10B 11B it produces Sports There were reports that last Theater 12B night's Jupiter was of a new Woman's Pages 2C 3C improved type called the Jupiter Vital Statistics 1315 4 i j j test-launche- n-g- g The work From Cape of slushy snow— containing 32 of an inch of precipitation— on Ogden Colder temperatures during the night turned the slush to ice making highways extremely slippery This morning's low in Ogden was 21 degrees The Weather Bureau said a new storm is moving down from the northwest and was expected to hit northwestern Utah by d ht ' j THE LEGACY OF LUKE Wonder Spur Jo Knowledge By GEORGE CORNELL (Edifor'i Not: Until lufc wrote th fesptl bearing his name the story of th Nifivity had not fetcn committed Associated Press Religion Writer Wonder is the spur to knowledge This was the compelling call sthat drew Luke into the greatest reporting assignment of all time He was out to probe a divine mystery— the advent of his Lord During a period while his comrade and spiritual mentor Paul Mas a prisoner in Caesarea on the Mediterranian east coast from about 57 to 59 AD Luke bad the time to pusue his monumental inquiry to print Here is a recounting of how the Systematic physician may have set out to erase the unknowns about Christ s arrival on earth r sis they were far from complete None gave a precise description of the Lord's arrival— no adequate explanation of an occurrence that would amaze men ever after METICULOUS RESEARCH Luke the polished observant jhad I information To start his research the bits of scrolls and parchments that circulated guardedly a mnncr fho congregations were a help even though fragmentary and meager And by he found some could be ignored as colored inventions Two of Luke's best sources were certainly the asins anostle Mallhew' and John Mark both authoFs of gospels The earliest first-han- d " cross-checkin- g There chance would be no better and he was near Jesus' home territory There was a store of documents for his preliminary scrutiny Many persons as he wrote had "undertaken to compile a narrative" of Jesus But to Luke a doctor trained in factual analy-1 Christmas In ' earnest prayer ifun devotion fPi- v uvea in caesarea ' n Cf"-- " !lc ill JTctUl tt Js AT mo scivitc lai- I - tn1 xir micci AniM? v-- (AP) — Vicious unseasonal twisters tore through southern Illinois' "Tornado Alley" late yesterday leaving a tragic toll of death injury and destruction Nine fatalities were reported in this southern Illinois area and another in eastern Missouri More than 100 persons were hurt — at least 80 in Murphysboro and Mount Vernon 111 alone — and scores of homes flattened Unofficial estimates placed property damage in the millions of dollars Although destruction was greatest in Mount Vernon which counted 75 to 100 homes destroyed or badly damaged the twisters created the worst human misery m Murphysboro EIGHT DIED Here eight persons died and at least 35 w§re hospitalized Thirty homes were destroyed — 15 by fires which followed the tornadic winds In addition nearly a score of other towns reported injuries or damage by the violent late autumn weather Thus this southern Illinois section again was offered tragic evidence of the reason it is called "Tornado Alley" Mostly because of twisters which regularly churn through the area the weather bureau ranks Illinois as a whole the country's over-al- l leader in tornado deaths The deadliest tornado in the nation's history centered in southern Illinois on March 18 1925 That vast twister killed 659 persons in Missouri Illinois and Indiana — but 606 of them were in Illinois MURPHYSBORO IN ONE FAMILY In addition to the Murphysboro dead there was one fatality near Du Quoin 111 and one near Farmington Mo Killed at a community called Sunfield about three miles north of Du Quoin was James Carter about 70 A boy Robert Shannon was fatally injured in a twister which struck a rural area near " Farmington econd Desian Going Well n U S Atlas WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States is reported well along in building a second design of Air Force intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) It also is said to be rocket engines for the testing submarine-launche- d intermediate range Polaris missile (IRBM) of the Navy These disclosures of new progress in missile weaponry came from Dan A Kimball head of a missile engine firm Kimball General president of Aero-je- t Corp is a former secretary of the Navy Kimball speaker last night at a meeting of the Washington section of the American Rocket Society said in answer to a question that the first engine for the Titan ICBM has been delivered and that others are in production The Titan is a 5000-mil- e range missile like the Atlas which was test fired successfully on Tuesday from Cape Canaveral Fla The Air Force has two ICBM — the Atlas project for which Convair is the primary contractor and the Titan under contract to the Martin company The Titan program was started by the Air Force more than three years after development of the Atlas had been ordered Kimball also said the first and second stages of the power plant for the 1500-milrange Polaris missile were tested last week and "we're going to fire some more this week" He did not make clear whether these were tests of the rocket engines at Aero-jet'- s California plants or flight tests made at the Cape Canaveral site Pentagon officials revealed last week that the Polaris project has been accelerated with the first missile now expected to be ready in 1960 or earlier The Polaris developed by Lockheed is unlike the Air Force's ICBM and IRBM weapons and the Army's Jupiter IRBM in that it uses solid fuel instead of liquid and with a clinical scrupulous-- ! ""7 ness 10 get as ne saiflj anifijicvt trier timidly withdrawn from the risky to consult surviving witnesses who See Page 4A Col 5 propellant inrf81! T 111 pro-gia- e "tied-down- " PARIS (UP)— President Dwight D Eisenhower and the 14 other NATO chiefs concluded today their historic summit conference with an agreement to seek missile-ag- e into an enemy's territory Jane's described the future Soviet fleet as "underwater satellites" powered by nuclear engines and "large enough to carry intermediate ballistic rockets with a radius of more than range 1 500 at peace through fresh disarmament talks with Russia and to insure it by arming Western-Europ- e with nuclear missiles' The final communique of the four-daconference included an American offer to share with its allies the technical know-hoof 1500-milintermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) production miles" y In the foreword to the new Jane's edition Editor Raymond Blackman that Russia's military planners may be suggested the whole concept of naval warfare revolutionizing Blackman said that although Russia may have superiority in numbers in her underwater fleet "the United States cannot be said to have lagged behind in pressing submarine design towards its ultimate development" 1957-185- 8 w e The decision to strengthen the western nations against the threat of aggression through IRBMs and nuclear warheads was blamed on Russia which "persists" in arming itself with "the most modern and destructive weapons including missiles of all kinds" AT NATO MEETING NATION AWAITS JOINT REPORT PARIS (AP) — A joint report on the NATO conference will be given Monday evening by President Dwight D Eisenhower and State Secretary John Foster Dulles The report will be broadcast and televised from the White House starting at 6:30 MEET RUSSIANS lew Faces Old Friends The western powers offered to resume the U N Disarmament Subcommittee meetings with Russia which ended in London last summer in complete disagreement The talks would either be in the subcommittee or held outside the U N by the foreign ministers The choice would be Russia's The final session of the NATO council took two hours and 45 minutes to agree point by point on its "Charter of Paris" designed to convert NATO into a missile-agdefense shield Observers said the conference provided a strengthening of the European voice in NATO and a "softening" of American leader ship Lisennower ciosea conference with a request mat me leaders pause lor 30 seconds of silent reflection "in the hope that their work has not been in vain" FLIGHT HOME Then the President went to the U S Embassy for a nap before boarding his plane for the flight home An official spokesman for the summit meeting disclosed the heads of government of the 15 NATO nations fully endorsed the western disarmament proposals rejected by the Russians last September The communique said the NATO council "will neglect no possibility of restricting armaments within the limits of their Pose Problems For US By GEORGE McARTHUR PARIS (AP) — Socialist opponents continually President insist that German rearmament Dwight D Eisenhower and Sec-- ! precludes Soviet concessions that retary of State John Foster Dulles might mean reunification for East found new life and new independ- and West Germany still the ence in western Europe's states- major issue in the divided counmen at the NATO summit confer- try ence SOUND OUT RUSS Old friends and a new face The West German chancellor posed problems US diplomacy has not had to face in Europe so adroitly couched a plea to other long as America alone could guarantee defense against the Rus- European government chiefs to sound out the Russians on a cold-wa- r sians The men who made the key truce — and then worked on moves in the talks were Norwe- the Americans to go along gian Premier Einard Gerhardsen The staunch personal and two old pals of the United of the Catholic chancelStates — West German Chancellor lor lessened American fears Konrad Adenauer and British Macmillan came to the confePrime Minister Harold Macmil-la- n rence firmly opposed to the idea l of talks at this time Here is what they did — and the with the Kremlin bosses because probable reasons why: he feels nothing can come of Gerhardsen — Made the them suggestion by a western government leader that Washington and Moscow try direct neto to t end gotiations try tensions He insisted the door be kept open to give the Russians a chance to prove they want peaceful coexistence between capitalown security' ism and communism At the same time they "anSTAY DECISION WASHINGTON UP — Senate nounced their willingness to proHe urged postponement of the rackets investigators were unde- mote any negotiations likely to decision to accept or reject Amer cided whether to subpena a Ten- lead to a controlled disarmament ican medium-rangmissiles until agreement They said they would the weapons were actually ready nessee judge linked by testimony prefer to do this within the U N for delivery a year or more from to a reported "fix" of a labor DISARMAMENT PROGRAM now violence case against 13 TeamHe also asked that NATO state ster Union members They also said they were' willto examine any Soviet proing is it that equipping itself with The committee ended two s posals for general or partial dis only because the of armament or for controlled reSoviet challenge in this field weeks hearings on teamster made it necessary types of armaviolence in Tennessee yesterday duction of all l Why did he take these stands? and schduled a closed door meet- ments The summit conference headed Gerhardsen is a Socialist and ing during the day to discuss Mr Eisenhower already had by Socialist Europe's parties gener- future plans There was no inally favor more talks with the dication that any new hearing agreed on the establishment of American missile bases and nuRussians His country is on the schedule would be announced Soviets' northern doorstep and Nor was there any indication clear stockpiles on the European could be overrun probably easily that the group would decide continent The approach to the as it was by Hitler in World War whether to issue a subpena for Russians was worked out in talks II But Gerhardsen does not want Chattanooga Raulston last night and this morning Judge While inviting the Russians to to close the door on all the pro- Schoolfield The judge was the tection NATO can give Norway focus of the committee's last two talk disarmament the West pointed out that the Soviets are includultimately days of hearings Adenauer — Operating mainly Chairman John L McClellan ing "the most 'modern and defrom his hotel suite the West said the committee had structive weapons including misGerman Chancellor wanted politi- no plans to call the judge but siles of all kinds" in their own cal problems given equal rank he did rule out the possibility armed services with military issues at the meet- Testimony Tuesday disclosed that "As long as the Soviet Union is There elea still was there ing strong "quite a bit of talk" persists in this attitude we have ment in his country that after around Chattanooga that School-fiel- no alternative but to remain vigithe horrors of World War II had been given $18500 to lant and look to our defenses" fears Germany will be the battle quash the indictment against the the communique declared ground for World War III His 13 teamsters NATO STRENGTH pm 3P jjj4 "IT i high-leve- first two-pow- er East-Wes- Senate Group Undecided On Subpoena (D-Ar- k) d WHO HAD THE BEST BRE O WELL QUEEN HAD MOR niques" PARIS (AP)— A sparkling controversy bubbled over Paris today as to who had the best champagne President Dwight D Eisenhower or Queen beth II it Eliza- One thing was certain— the Queen had more of She was here in April on a three-da- y "We are therefore resolved to achieve the most effective pattern of NATO strength taking into account the most recent developments in weapons and tech- state visit Over the Queen's three days she was served 10 different champagnes Ike got two The real tet for champagne the Kentucky Derby of the bubbly is which wine French President Rene Coty selects for dinners he gives guests at his Elysee Palace He gave a dinner to the Queen and one to the President He also had Eisenhower to lunch Champagne graced his groaning board on all three occasions For the Queen Coty served Heidsieck 1952 a splendid year but a slightly sweet wine for some jaded tastes Ike got Veuve Cliquot dry 1949 at his dinner and Dom Pengnon named for the monk who invented champagne for lunch To this end the communique said NATO has decided to establish stockpiles of nuclear war- heads and guided missiles "which will be readily available for the defense of the alliance in case of need" The chief points of the communique as outlined by official conference sources: —A declaration reaffirming the principles and aims of the North Atlantic Treaty It is founded on the rights of all people to live in peace and freedom under the governments of n t i ! f i MCfdlfl d — —? — NAMES IN NEWS She's Trying Still That's A Sure Thinq An ailing woman Germany made another bid today for legal recognition as Grand Duchess Anastas-ilast daughter of the Communist-executed Czar of Russia The Woman known as Anna Anderson psmcehasVdizbeen seeking recognition when she was 19years old She has been trying to prove she survived the shooting and bayoneting by Red Army troops which wiped out the rest of the Russian royal family July 17 1913 She is bringing suit against Duchess Barbara von Mecklenburg a member of the House of Hesse to which the last czarina of Russia belonged The Duchess is filing a counter-claithat Anna Anderson actually is Franziska Schanzkowski born in Borek Poland in 1896 Ingrid Bergman won an academy award Oscar last year for the film "Anastasia" Leaves Movies: Merle Oberon has decided to quit show business and make her permanent residence in Mexico friends of the actress said today in Mexico City She arrived there yesterday to spend Christmas with her husband Bruno Pagliai who owns large business interests there Too Realistic: Actor Frank Love joy broke his right leg during filming of a "Meet McGraw" fight scene in Hollywood Producers said his double would complete the scenes Last Curt ain: Alexander IIop kins McDannald 80 f of the Encyclopedia Americana from 1020 to 1948 died at his Delray Beach home in Florida Dorothy L Savers 64 detective writer Lord Peter Wimsev in London grey-haire- d in Hamburg a m editor-in-chie- their own choice —After World War II the West disarmed but the Soviets did not — NATO today is an organization of free peoples whose unity is indispensible to their security and to world peace —The NATO defensive alliance has assumed a new significance Only intensified collective effort can safeguard its peoples and their liberties Together they have ample means to defend their liberty in full freedom f 1 ine wiretap case against Teamsters President-elec- t James R Hoffa Hoffa and two others are charged with illecallv ts teiepnores in the Detroit sters Union headauarters federal Judge Frederick Van Pelt Bryan ordered the jury of seven men and five women locked up for the night when they failed to reach a verdict after more than five hours of deliberation Hoffa and two cn-- pfpnrf a nf Owen Brennan president of Teamster Union Local 337 and Bernard Spindel a professional wiretapper are charged with illegally tapping the telephones of union officials in the Teamsters Detroit offices from 1953 to 1957 e super-weapon- 15 1 1 S NEW YORK (UP)— A federal jury resumed deliberations today m e anti-communis- m MST o eta i 0d 1 I -- 0 V |