Show n THE WEATHER TEMPERATURES mPW I Vfl In In Atln la $zySP OGDEN — Fair today tomorrow Nish today 49 low tonight 39-35 ’ UTAH— - Fair today tomorrow 5 5 low tonight High today 55-4- 29-3- - Press Associated United Press International V OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER AP Wirephoto 1 EXport 1959 89th Year No 286 4-71- 11 sit l - $ 15 cents IZZu mm :)(gsiG3cirQ 4 J Red Stresses Need for - v - i V 27 Aboard Airliner In Blue Ridge Area CHARLOTTESVILLE Va: (UPI) World Peace I iy ! US Test Bui Heads for ' Hopes that a miss- ing Piedmont airliner with 27 persons aboard had' been found here1 dashed last night when rescuers radioed' from a lonely 4000-foo- t mountain that they found no sign of MOSCOW TAP) — Soviet wreckage I t - 4 rescuers rushed to the mountain peak The would-bPremier i Nikita S Khrush chevsaid yesterday the cold located some 40 miles southwest of Charlottesville on the war ice' has cracked and strength of a report that a “shiny object” had been spotted e WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States intends to review its year-ol- d suspension of nuclear weapons tests unless the Soviet Union gives signs shortly of agreeing to peaceful coexistence must on a mountainside The report proved just another of the numerous false emerge “unless we want the madness of a world nuclear leads that weary search parties have been obliged to check an international test ban inmissile war” out But this one proved particularly disappointing since spection system The review could well produce a To exploit the cold war thaw the it had appeared to be a substantial lead Soviet premier said he President decision to resume underground One CAP official said privately “We’ve reached a staleEisenhower and Prime Minister tests sometime next year’ Nuclear ' Harold Macmillan of Britain are mate right now” explosions deep underground scien- agreed that a summit conference mountain on to remain the A were men few assigned tists say can be managed so that should be held — and "the sooner But to a final check make after the daylight: night the better” during there is no danger of new radioIn a relatively moderate speech the bulk of the team that spent some five hours searching active to Parliament Khrushchev 4 - ‘ " fall-o- ut ranged field policy foreign widely over ‘the —from wprld ' disarmament to his talks with Eisenhower in the United States U S INTERFERENCE His most belligerent utterance was a reference to what he called U S interference in Red China’s affairs in guarding Chinese Nationalist Formosa from invasion Red China has sworn to seize Formosa He was applauded when he predicted Formosa will be united with the mainland “The United States blocks the admission of Red China to the United Nations” Khrushchev laid “The Soviet Union has the friendWe liest relations with China on Chinese Red the policy support t AUTUMN SUNBURST Take a beautiful girl a blue blue sky and a parade of autumn colors and you have Utah at her best Bright shades and hues blaze and flame through her canyons and valleys or stretch in startling carpets across her plains The pretty miss is Linda Chadwick daughter of Mr and Mrs John W Chadwick North Ogden Blooms are chrisanthemums banked in rows on the USU Experimental Farm in Farmington The blue sky is one of Utah’s specialties Color picture by Ralph Collins Standard-Examine- staff: r Ogden s Hammarslqold to Visit Loos on U N Mission RAINS SPATTER GULF STATES Asoitd Press Cloudbursts hit the Gulf Coat states esterday and slashing inch ripped sections of Texas The deludes dumped 9 a ircb- -' es of rani near Houston Tex g homes were where flooded and 1 4 inches on Moot- gomery Ala in six hours The fury c f wind and rain failed in new areas as a freak-- ‘ Lh outburst of iolent weather subsided in the Intermountain area from Utah to Southern California after causing at least three deaths and millions of dollars in damage carher Formosa” But in his role of peace advo- cate Khrushchev- expressed regret at border clashes between Red - -- North Vietnam had been helping Loatlan Red rebels with- - supplies artillery support and actual aggression oh the frontier The members are Argentina Italy Japan and Tunisia Diplomatic sources say the report a chronicle of what the subcommitteemen heard and saw running to about 30 pages will present no conclusions but its substance will give the impression that while there was no aggression the rebels had North Vietnamese backing Laotian officials still say there was aggression But they say it ' Stopped when the council acted and the rebels reduced their activities to terrorizing and propa-gandizing rural i villagers They want permanent UN reprsenta-tio- n in Laos to keep things quiet NEW YORK (API — It took t4 4 touch with McMillan McMillan In SOVIET AGAINST months of patient police work withtum recruited Harden The lawyer Some Western delegates have insome detectives even skipping their ’then bought a can of lye and Har jden nude the attack on Miss Riss dicated they want the same thing' vacations the police said They' hoped Hammarskjold could Cut t’cy were so outraged by off 52 0Q0 acthe arrange it with Soviet consent In Pugach paid dastardly crime no effort wis too to the police but almost case he could not they said they cording txeaL They wanted to nail thoe immediately the trio began black- would propose - that ’ the security responsible for an attack £n pret- mailing Pugach - Eventually1 he council set it up and if the Rusty Linda Riva more than SI 000 addi- sians vetoed this proposal they them gave On June 15 the slender It was the blackmailing would take the proposal to the Gentionally brunette had epered the door calls phone Assembly tf her Ercrz apartment There stood their trail which put police on eral But the Soviet delegation in a a man who said he had a present With their authorities said the Soviet Union arrests' release press to deliver to deny eyr was against sending' any permansaid continued Pugach lie craned a cardtxvard box took out a glass jar and threw lye into erything but the three accomplices ent UN mission to Laos and there signed statements acknowledging was no question of its “supporting Idas Ras's face 5h was bhnded a’J Pugach was held m 3105000 or even tacitly agreeing” to such In one eye and hrr vision was bail the other three In 530000 each a step impau-em the ether Her forehead four-natio- 15-O- ct 1 1 d scalp were dr figured At once suspicion fell on Burton N Pugach 22 a Bronx attorney HAD BEEN SUITOR Pugach had been a suitor of the young secretary'- - But Miss Riss broke off wth him when she learned he was married and the day before the attack announced her engagement to another man Mias Pass tcld authorities Pugach had threatened her with jud such a fate Bit when the lawyer was token m for questioning he denied everything That's wrn the krg period cf detective work began Tc! ice obtained ciwurt authority to tap Pi gach'f phone and his movements were watched For a time there was ncth'-- g suspicious Then JV: polee said began - calls to get j in whhch varyam cf nnts ing money were Officers started tracing the calls Pugach and three men were arrested Friday on charges c maiming the woman The others are Al Smith Newkirk 31 r Walter 27 and Heard Harden 34 1 air-grou- n Police Solve Lye Case In 4Mj Month Defection" 2-- PITTSBURGH Pa (AP)— Steel recessed yesterday negotiations after what United Steelworkers President David J McDonald called “another exercise of futility” to end the nationwide steel strike R Conrad Cooper chief Indus--1 try negotiator said the union con- tinues to press for an inflationary wage increase He said the basic position of the steel companies "is not about to crumble” Both sides are scheduled to resume negotiations tomorrow in Washington where they have been summoned by the Federal Mediation Service Both Cooper and McDonald said they would be there They met for 90 minutes yesterday Arguments will begin Tuesday in the US Supreme Court on a union appeal to set aside a Taft Hartley injunction that could end the dispute for at least 80 days McDonald said the industry is depending on the injunction to halt the strike rather than attempt to negotiate a permanent settle109-da- y f Mc-Mli- an WANTED DEATH Police said Pugach enraged at the hrrokrf cf his engagement w:rh M-- s IL warded to have her H- in’- -i got in touch with New-kr- k a chent in a crim-irca-- e and Newkirk told him a Id COM J1 0000 Lhe po- U r al - LrIN- r ict - a a for a dlsfigure- S2oro Newkirk efvenn got in I gb nd step-by-ste- At Least 4 Weeks Seen On Ogden Wind Repair i By Paul Messick Citizens of two counties knocked to their knees by 100 winds last Friday won’t see all the damage to homes and businesses repaired for four or five weeks However the possibility that Ogden and other parts of Weber and mentThe top level negotiators have Davis counties will be declared been meeting on and off in Pitts- disaster areas was discounted by burgh since the US Dist Court Elmer Carver chairman of the y at Pittsburgh issued the county commissioners and C Austin 2 Oct Seager assistant mayor L The injuncinjunction tion was stayed immediately when Mr Seager said the problem at the union appealed this point is “purely administrative mile-per-ho- ur - Taft-Hart-le- an-- d c-l -- and India adding: “We would be glad if the incidents were not repeated and the problem solved' by negotiation “ The 1335 deputies of Parliament — the Supreme Soviet — applauded ' ATAST SEARCH every statement Khrushchev made search of the A vast about efforts to promote peace mountain country around CharMOST IMPORTANT lottesville slowed down with darkKhrushchev said that disarma ness There was ho trace of the ment — “the question agitating the missing plane - at nightfall It vanentire world” — should be given ished last night on a flight from the most important place on the Washington to Roanoke Va Residents of rural homes through agenda of a summit meeting The premier cited Soviet pro- out the lonely area joined police in p inspec ground parties which threaded up posals to allow tion in his total disarmament plan the mountainsides a procedure that the Western pow Helicopter ' pilots said they saw no want trace of flares or other indicaa ers consider tricky They and control tions from that possible survivors were strict inspection Ithe outset looking for help China UNITED NATIONS NY (APL-U- N Secretary General DaTtanv marskjold is planning to leave for Laos Nov 10 on a trip that may help steady the situation in that rebel-riddekingdom in Southeast Asia This was learned today as the security council awaited a report on n an investigation that a subcommittee made in Laos Sept 13 The report is expected tomorrow or Tuesday council set up the The subcommittee Sept 7 to check on Laos charges ’that Communist low-lyin- the mountain called it a night Maj Charles A Rausch Civil Air Patrol commander for central Virginia said the search for the plane which disappeared Friday night would be intensified today An additional 200 national guardsmen were assigned to the search party which totaled about 1000 persons Ambulances had been alerted to stand by at the foot of the mountain located about seven miles west of Montabello Va at the out' ’ set of the search Police and fire units from Buena Vista Va about 15 miles south of the site were told to sttand by on the mountainside which is near the Blue Ridge Parkway' Buena Vista - police dispatcher said a report had J B Andersonthat “there were a received been few survivors” The sheriff’s office for Rockbridge County where Buena Vista is located" said it had received the sarr? isvpvi was sending its u aid in ihemountainside deputies search FUTURE OF MANKIND We are going ahead and clean up the mess I haye heard of no move to call a special council meeting there’s no necessity for one don’t believe the damage is con- centrated heavily enough to war- rant declaring Ogden a disaster area” Elmer Jenkins president of the Ogden Building Trades Council who toured most of the stricken citv yesterday where an anticipated two million dollars worth and one-ha- lf of damage was dope to homes bus iness establishments and city and county schools estimated the time required to repair the wind destruction Mr Jenkins said that he believed “highball” crews ’could restore most of the damaged homes to their original condition in a month or a little more He expressed criticism of the types of construction irf the hardest hit subdivisions Rolling Hills Ron Clare and Hidden Village ' 4 Toll Mounts As Mexico Gets Relief - flood-devastat- ed w pop-ulation- of Machines Swoop Two Women: Dios Hurt -- -- : INDEX TC-7- C NAMES IN THE NOWS ’ We By Edward H e 'Witti fir eparecainiess Cam' TIIr (Irfiftr'a Hi frtr fM fl ptimiftic naaki4 l th prU tT la Mil (itaifkaat art k ha f If Aitltrf nn taic Aiaaciat4 fra aicWairaly far f LIVERMORE Calif AP) — In wriftaa Pr Itwartf Tallar praftasar ! aJtytka aaa Livermore we are working on f tfc Lawraaa ' Kaiatiaa irtr CaUf Uramara as a la la srtf one with serious weapons very pur SfimU-Is critkally Impartial m4 ha in to be that order is pose pre far ailrfa tfirtlutf prft akt am far tht nit imaritlaa) ft pared and to stay prepared We believe that as long as we are prepared for w ar — as long as we are fully two decades old I think prepared defensively and as long as have an answer It is not an easy we are prepared to strike back as one It is not a complete one It is long as we are prepared with big in fact not more than a direction weapons and with small weapons in and a hope a flexible way as long as this is If we stay well prepared we can the case— we believe that there will buy one thing We can buy time not be war And wether it is worthwhile to buy I should mention a property of time depends on the way you are the Russians which I respeet They going to use that time are patient and they are taking the I w ill start out by reminding' you long view As long as they know cf one excellent way the work! has that we are strong I believe and I used this time which 1 claim our hope there will be peace preparedness has bought To remain strong is pot an easy At the end of World War II Euthing because we are living in a rope was destroyed You have seen age and what was im- the hopelessness cf the people and 15 years ago is inadequate you have seen something else which pressive to my mind is worse: It is the today People ask and rightly where hatred which was left in the wake will all thij lead to? We arm and cf World War II the Russians arm ard in the end But I have seen Europe recently it will end in havoc I know this The ruins are cleared away The is in the finds cf all people It has Denpl live better than they lived been in my thoughts constantly and before the war These days it painfully for a period w tich is now seems difficult to hav hope and Writlwi tfe fimt lafc-arata- a fast-movin- g V rr yet there is hope auid there is enterprise in Europe and they are going forward more rapidly than any other people in the world HATRED DIES is a firm determination this There time to work together to tear down old barriers and to forget the hate ful aspects of the past The hatred that has divided Europe for centuries seems to have been wiped out as if by a miracle We have helped We have helped by providing time and we have helped by the Marshall Plan But this reconstruction and this spiritual revival is to my mind infinitely more than any help which could have come from the outside It is a symbol cf what one can get if one buys time It is a premise of a brighter future It is a rebirth of freedom and humanity for hundreds cf millions But I want to tell you about something even bigger something which as yet has not been accomplished which is more challenging more difficult and more frightening The industrial revolution has made our world small It has brought extensive contacts: it has demanded readjustment between the nations and between people Perhaps the "first thing that the modern age has brought to the continents of Asia Africa and South America is a feeling of injustice a feeling of unrest a clear knowledge that a good life is possible and that everpone has a right to it Old and quiescent corners of the world are now involved in a turbulent change: political economic social and technical This irrestible movement of the backward people has been called the revolution of rising expectations W’e ourselves' started this revolution a long time : ago when we declared that all men are created equal To my mind it is clear what the people of the world want and will have is a fulfillment of this promise: All men should be equal in dignity and equal in opportunity If you think realistically of what is going on in the world you will understand that this is a tremendous challenge In our Declaration of Independence we have issued a blank check which will be filled out for more wealth than exists now and for more wealth than we can imagine that anyliody could possibly create Se Page 4A Cel1 LABOR REQUESTS “It’s pretty good when wind will blow down a brick house It must be poorly constructed” he said Asked if he expected requests for a large number of carpenters bricklayers and other craftsmen he said that he did not However if ordeps for them are placed he said he could supply at least 200 carpenters in three days Getting bricklayers would take a little long-- er ' Many of the residents areas hit hardest by the in the hurricane-forc- e winds have moved in with friends and relatives- or are living temporarily in ‘motels and hotels - guard has been deputized and posted at the Washington entrance to the Ron Clare project td discourage the curious from entering A di'ch was dug across the Monroe St entrance It is deep enough to prevent passage by autos A GUARDS PATROL Guards are also patroling in the Rolling Hills division to prevent looting Police vho have been especially alert in the disaster sec-ioof town have received no reports of thefts so far ns Orson Welles Bares W Quiz "Fix7 Off"'” THE ' GENIUS r Orson Wll said in Paris he was offered as much as $170000 to star as a genius on a fixed TV quiz show three years ago He said when he told acquaintances about the offer “they just laughed” it off as ' nothing to get upset about to in make a Paris The actor film for Darryl Zanuck said that when he declined the proposition a “notable egghead” took his place He did not further identify the person nor would re name the producer who he said proposed “the fix” Jfj also refused to mention the name cf the net' ' work xr the show COLLAPSES : Herman Van Vcm 35 a restaurant Laroy cook in Santa Monica was jailed on a bigamy complaint brought by his fourth wife and tcld police he was the father cf six of DAD seven children burned to death in a fire at Ottumwa la Van Horn collapsed at the police station police said as' he told them of his children The bigamy complaint Was lodged by Helen Geneva ScheerK' wetter 47 who said she and the cook were mar--' ried at Woodland Hills less than two months ago She said she did not know at the time that Van Horn was married She said he admitted he was that his children were burned to death ‘ DOCTOR PLEADS: Dr Cer-nar- d o doctor Finch the indicted for the murder cf his wife has pleaded innocent But his sweetheart and Carol Tregeff has postponed her plea Finch 41 answered loudly “net guilty” when asked how he pleaded in Los Angeles Superior Court: Judge Lewis Drucker then set Finch’s trial for Dec 1 in Pomona not far from the Finch home in West Covina But Finch’s attorney indicated he would try to get the trial moved to Los mild-manner- ' 4 ed well-to-d- Angeles Miss Tregoff 22 once worked in Fincms office She and the doctor t are accused of the July 18 murder of Barbara Jt$n Finch on the grounds of the spacious - Finch home p Jt V Highly placed officials said yesterday one thing is already agreed among US policymakers This is that the Soviet government ' will not be permitted to wangle a more1' or less permanent prohibition on tests without a’ formal agreement providing for an inspection system designed to prevent cheating Exactly a year ago — Oct 31 1958 — the United States began a voluntary moratorium on the testing of nuclear weapons byjoint agreement'with Britain The Soviet Union thev world’s other nuclear MEXICO' CITY (AP) — Relief power was told- the suspension supplies poured into the hurricane would continue for a year provided states of Co- the Russians also held no tests' and lima and Jalisco yesterday The during that time death toll continued to motint ' CENTRAL i ISSUE The latest count of those who The thbee powers began negotiaperished in the disaster that struck tions at Geneva for a more formal the Pacific Coast area four days of nuclear test exploofficials was 1452 prohibition fear and it ago " sions This quickly focused on what f will go higher to The smell of death hung over the is still the central issue--hocreate an international inspection port of Manzanillo Indications are that there are more bodies buried system that would meet both Westin ‘addition !to' the 237 already re ern and Soviet requirements' " “ covered thfere i Moscow would prefer little orno the United States and' inspection BODIES ON SLABS want a policing operation Britain Many cf the dead fori lack c I so extensive that it would be virtu burial Space were lying on slabs ally impossible for any of the powin front of-- ' ruined buildings sur- ers to hold tests in secret rounded by mourning relatives anc The two sides agreed to interrupt friends the Geneva negotiations Last Tuesr The inland town of Mlnatitlan day the talks at Geneva were re' whdre only about 500 out of a sumed 1371 survived probably American officials have argued will be evacuated Most of its build that the Soviet plan would allow I ings are buried in mud that slid for considerable cheating ‘ down from the surrounding hills In some places it is 10 feet deep Hundreds of residents of the stricken area were inoculated by medical teams for tetanus and typhoid The teams gave vaccine in 1 jections for many who had been 1 stung by scorpions driven from their nests in adobe structures by flood NEW YORK (UPI)— Sanitation waters department street sweeping machines swept up two women in 15233 MILLION A preliminary estimate of property Brooklyn killing one and seriously loss including crops and live- njuring the other in separate acci- dents yesterday stock was 280 million dollars coincidence further both By State authorities calculated the women were named Stein com and bean crops in the area Police said Mrs Goldie Stein 67 were almost totally destroyed of injuries received when she died They are the area’s basic foods was struck by a sweeper- - while crossing a street in the Coney Island section The sweeper’s two big rotary brushes pulled her under the machine before the driver’ was ' (91 Pages 4 SECTIONS) able to stop” 4A Editorial Page Mrs Olga Stein also crossing ' 73 a street was struck by another Radio and TV Log 73 sweeper but prevented by a cowObituaries ' catcher on the front from being Society Pages swept all the way under She was 23-4- 3 Sports Pages taken to a hospital in a serious conHC dition with head injuries t 7 heater 7 y v - |