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Show .. . . ... , .. , . f ' '.'-.--- ' 1 HERALD AC Orem Office FR Provo Offices r For Advertising, News and Circulation ProTo Society FR - v . .. ..... ... . .... . .. ' i! , , j - i ; j 05 50 PARTLY CLOU DY 84 today with a few tnowf flurrie. over the mountains. Fair tonlrht and Saturday. A litUef warmer afternoons with highs 12, to 57. Low tonlrht 30 to 35. Herald Building New Located at 4th North 2nd West & FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1958 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, YEAR, NO. 229 SEVENTY-SECON- D PRICE FIVE CENTS v'S Ike Delays Action On Main Cuban NEW LEGISLATION HELPS Rebel Body LOCAL SERVICE AIRLINES DENVER (UP) The president of Frontier said Thursday night capital gains legislation Isolated signed by President Eisenhower Wednesday brings closer the ultimate hope that local service airlines Bill Anti-Recessi- on By VINCENT J; BURKE Air-lin- es Threatened Attack All-O- can operate in the black. C. A. Myrhe of Denver said the bill makes it possible for local carriers, not in a financial position to borrow sufficient funds, to buy modern aircraft. Frontier, largest of America's 13 local service carriers, lost $117,524 last year despite a 7 per cent increase in passenger miles and a 13 per cent increase ut the Rebels Appears to Fizzle Out By HAVANA hit-and-r- Truman smiles for FAMILIAR SCENES FOR HARRY Former President Harry cameramen from back seat of his automobile after his arrival at Union Station in He plans to meet with Washington, one of familiar scenes to the Democratic Party's economic strategy committee. He will remain in town over weekend to testify before house committee early next week on national economy. (UP Telephoto) S. ex-preside- nt. Fail to Accept Western Proposals Orders Bar Soviet Russia Agrees Group From Test To P Meeting A-Bo- mb re-Sum- mit WASHINGTON (UP) Russia to an ambassadorial agreed today meeting next week to take the first step toward a summit conference. But the White House said Russia still, imposing terms la Eisenhower Plans Stay At Golf Club j i . WASHINGTON (UP ) President Eisenhower leaves chill Washington today; for a brief weekend at the Augusta, Ga., National Golf Club. f The President planned to board his personal plane, the Columbine HI at 11 a.m. e.s.t. and return to Washington late Sunday. Press Secretary James C. Hag-ert- y and Maj. Gen. Howard the President's personal physician, were to accompany Eisenhower. Mc-Snyd- er, Indian Girl Killed at Play that amount to rejection of the Western proposals. The White House said the Soviet note, delivered to President Eisenhower this morning, "diplomatic preparations which shall not deal at all with a summit meeting but only with thb time place and composition of a subsequent meeting of foreign ministers." "The Soviet reply is manifestly not an acceptance to the Western proposal," the White House said. The United States, Britain and France proposed in identical notes March 31 that Russia agree to ambassador-leve- l talks in Moscow the second half of April to "determine whether a summit conference would serve a useful purpose." The Soviet reply, informants said, agreed to an ambassadorial meeting and suggested that it bepro-pos- es gin April 17. At first glance this appeared to . be a concession to Western views that careful preparatory work must precede any ' top level meeting to ease the cold war. Secretary of State. John Foster Dulles took a rough translation of the note to President Eisenhower this morning. The President delayed his departure for a weekend at Augusta, Ga., to discuss it An FT. DUCHESNE (UP) ear-ol- d Indian girl has been accidentally killed while playing orders today barring from the vicinity of its Pacific Proving Grounds a small group of Quakers now enroute to protest against the imminent nuclear tests. The orders apply to any un authorized persons who are U,S. Citizens or subject to U.S. juris- d ction. But they were specifically designed, it was learned, to forestall a tiny group now on its way to the proving grounds via Honolulu aboard a ketch named Golden Rule." "The The AECVs announcement of the regulations issued in an action unprecedented in the history of U.S. atomic weapons tests, was such as to indicate possibility that the United States wants to get the 1958 test series over with as quickly as possible. The orders do not apply to any foreigners because the country cannot make regulations applicable on the high seas to citizens of other countries. If any foreign aircraft or ships should enter the 390,000 square mile danger zone they would, however, be warned of the potential hazard and told how to get out in the shortest possible time. 30-fo- ot Bourguiba Blamed By edght-- y at Ft. Duchesne. The girl apparently was hit by the end of a two-whe-el trailer she and other youngsters were using as a teeter-totte- r, according to C J. Carter j criminal investigator for the Ujintah and Ouray In dian Reservation. The victim, whose name was not immediately learned, was a daughter of Mr? and Mrs. Vincent Sirrech of Rahdlett. v LIVESTOCK SHOW SET FOR MORGAN APRIL 26 MORGAN (UP) The j HERALD INDEX Utah Lake Expert Reports on Water Conditions, ; Flood Possibilities . . t.'... 3 Provo Mayor Reports on San Francisco Traffie v Conference ...... ...........9 Prep Golf Added to BYU -- : . : Invitational v Banks, Mays on Hot Sluffgint Streak Hoffa Moves i ......... 6 .... ....T to Strip Beck d Of, Trappings 16 Central Utah News 3, 4, 5, 8, 9 Union-Owne- . Classified ..;.......! 13, 14, 15 1 Comics ... ... i ..... . ... ..12: .1 ..111 . . . Editorial Pae .... NaUonal, World News 2, 13, 16 1 ...110 Obituaries Sports Stocks ... Boys Die In For San DiegoFire ....6, 7 4 Sputnik in freight. Army Is Working On New 7 Missile Wis. (UP) scientist Dr. Martin Schilling . said Thursday night the Army is working on an ultimate defense weapon an missile that can destroy anything an enemy could throw at the United States. He, also said a counter weapon now nearing completion, called "Hercules," will have "greatly increased kill effectiveness, range and altitude coverage." He said it can destroy not only enemy aircraft, but also missiles that could be used in the years just ahead. "Hercules" will be ready for use shortly, Schilling told the Milwaukee Press Club's annual gridiron dinner. Effective Against ICBM's A member of the Redstone arsenal team which helped launch America' Schilling Explorers, said the Army's top defense weap- - MILWAUKEE, German-bor- n "anti-missil- N.C; EDENTON, 1st Lt. James (UP)-nMari- ne G. Cow art Jr. (UP) Cheryl Turner was found to have committed, "justifiable homicide" by a coroner's jury today. of Russia today accepted the West's proamposal to start this talks bassadorial month, bat on condition a summit conference be held regardless of how the preliminaries turn oat. MOSCOW By JACK V. FOX Louisiana and Australia's "out back land. But whatever those witnesses saw,, it wasn't the dying satellite. Western observers have sighted the "dog moon" in its diminishing orbit since those reports. Radio Moscow; reported tt had completed - its 2,3190i circuit of'.' the earth at :l !a.m. e.s.t; today. The broadcast made no mention of the expected end of the "Muttnik," ) , pre-summ- it (D-N.M- extra-powerf- ul nuclear-propelle- ing friction of the earth's atmos-in- g satellites Unless the Russians have thing to orbit around .the managed to toss a secret satelearth. lite into space since they launched But American astrophysicists the little dog Laika last Nov. S. Russia' has not reported to Infigured its bright streak of death New a for ternational spectacle Geophysical Year iray provide I v England. headquarters ; what it learned Fall Expected Ssturday from' the dog during the week it Dr. Luigi Jacchia, of the Smith- received radio signals from her " sonian Astrophysics! Observatory space ship. at Cambridge, Mass., calculated Made Contribution The Soviets did announce that the. satellite should enter the burning friction; of the earth's fatmo-pher- e Laika had made a "considerable somewhere over New Eng- contribution to the study of physiland about 9 p.m. Saturday. It is cal and biological ohenomena in already slightly past its originally conditions of cosmic flight. A Soviet magazine 'said the - dog re calculated life of five months. exekt-sivelmained "calm' throughout her Its, fall will, leave : space to the orbits of three U.. Si flight. j . - ; y PhiladelDhia next w4rl fnm,lv-Tn-r the Teamsters' Undone jV Cashdn said that be wanted to see Hoffa get a fair trial. "J. can't be anymore explicit and I can't be any fairer' Cashin said. "Hoffa and the fTeamster union are bound together just like . , In- T. over." The judge added: I can't control the committee but I lean control my own court. Because I un (Continued on Page. Four) The Democratic Party's ecostrategy committee, with Truman sitting in, wound up for a new swing at the administra- tion's policies. A spokesman said that some of the 22 members of the advisory, committee on economic policy of the Democratic Advisory Council are certain to call for a tax cut. The President, for the present, has ruled out tax reduction as a weapon for countering the decline, and Democratic leaders in Congress so far have made no move to challenge, him on this point. The group meeting today was the Advisory Committee on Economic Policy of the Democratic nomic Three Killed j anti-recessi- on go-slo- w j econ-mxm- ii J j Vy.f.: " r 3-C- r v - s' i ,' i ver. The accident claimed the lives ic of Harry Frederick Anderson, 66 of Kiowa, Colo.; his wife, Evelyn,. and T. Sgt. Howard E. Coult hard, 30, of Lowry Air Forct Base, Denver. The driver of the third autb mobile, David Emmet Davis," 45,' of Denver, suffered only a sprained ankle. The deaths raised Colorado's rapidly mounting 1958 highway fatality toll to 75. 60, . "nJ- M ' i t ... - , f ' X k v Tt '. I . . w's . - -i ,- '' iMyiL'iiij-:-l"W''''W''''li'git- - - J Collision ar V' j n DENVER (UP) Three persons died late Thursday night in a three-ca- r collision on a bridge In Arapahoe County southeast of Den- " 1 . Am.' T there should be any herings volving them until this trial To Call For Tax Cut "Mr. Stompanato was swearing and I told him, 'J fold you I don't want to argue in front Of the baby. I've always called her baby. "I turned to my daughter and said I was going downstairs and coming back up to my room. I don't know why I said that. She said, yes, she would .stay and watch TV. Mr. stompanato followed me downstairs and the quarrel grew more violent. ?r a1 linlre in a nVia.in it." . : - stl j l anti-recessi- on V-- of , ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (UP) .) Sen. Clinton P. Anderson testsaid today preliminary ing of nuclear propulsion for space ships probwill be started by December ably In Nevada. Anderson said "the outcome of the test can very well Indicate when America can be in d the air with a satellite or space ship." 1,120-pou- multi-billio- I (UP7 nd e Rackets Committee discontinued its Teamster Union heatings until after the trial. Hoffa, Teamster Unjon boss, and two others are scheduled for trial Monday before edera1 M. A Senate John CashLn. Judge committee on improper activities in the labor and management fields has scheduled a fjearing in United Press Staff Correspondent Lana HOLLYWOOD (UP) Turner, crying and clutching a rail for support, said today her daughter plunged a knife into the stomach of her Too Many Lies lover, Johnny Stompanato, so back that I was Advisory Council. Top Democratanswered 1 swiftly she never saw the .Wade. ic Senate and House leaders have finding out too many lies and never The dazzling blonde movie star that joined the council, confound wasn't any one I ceived told a coroner's inquest that her worse than just by Democratic National the others. (She did Stomat (Continued on Page Four) daughter, Cheryl, sprang (ContenneO on Page Two) ' he had threatened after panato '' .Mt her violently and toid her she would never get away from him. ' :mmm ism, "He iaid I would have to jump ' ' and jump, and hop and hop, or ' "t he would cut my face or cripple me," she sadd. ' I : . . shoutwere and arguing They ing violently in Lama's pink bedroom, the star said, ' and Stom' : - panato suddenly walked to a closet and got a jacket and shirt of ' ' V ' V t A ; his hanging there, When he came back he carried a clothes . ( . moved Lana toward and hanger as if to strike her. Don't Erer: Touch Me "I told him. Don't ever touch me again, we're finished. This is ' :; the end. I walked toward the door and he was following me. I opened it and my daughter came fat. "I swear, k was so fast that I ' foSm fa the thought she'd bit ' stomach. , They came together, never saw a they parted. I btodVV.;:';-V!A-:"'V;- - anti-missil- IK federal YORK (UP) judge today warned he would de clare a m istrial for James R, Hoffa, accused of wiretap con-spiracy, unless the jMcClellan JVEW ; Due to Fall By Satu relay By UNITED PRESS Russia's little , dead space dog isexpected to come back to earth this weekend in a blaze of glory. The expected demise of Sputnik II has already brought "eyewitness accounts of its fall from carrying a hydrogen warhead or "maybe a satellite with indecent intentions." Full support money and aid has not been denied by the government for development, he said at a news conference earlier. "To the best of my knowledge there is not only the intent but also the means to proceed with urgency under optimum schedules," Schilling said. "The mari who is doing the job is not complaining of being held up." Detection Toughest Problem Schilling, who has been in rocket and missile work for 20 years, said the toughest problem in antimissile defense is detection. Am incoming rocket traveling at 5,000 miles an hour and packing (Continued on Page Four) Justifiable Homicide7 HOLLYWOOD memPARIS (UP.) Right-win- g bers of the French cabinet hard- inter-continent- al Coroner's Jury Rules BULLETIN Savannah, 'Ga., walked away unhurt when his A4D-- 2 jet plane crashed and burned on takeoff Thursday at the Naval Auxiliary Air Station here. It was the third crash of a Navy or Marine Corps jet in North Carolina in as many days. on would be effective against an missile (ICBM) In Stompanato Slaying Pilot Unhurt In Jet Plane Crash e" Judge Warns OfMistria In Hoffa Case $233,-500,000,0- 'Anti-Missile- . BULLETINS an 1 1 anti-governm- Stalemate SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP) Three young sons of a'Nj$vy chief petty ened their attitude toward Tunisia .officer were burned . to death today, angered because they said Thursday night when .fire swept Tunisian President Habib Bourtheir ..bousing project home. guiba had been "too stubborn" to Six other children and the wife reach a settlement of the dispute . of CPO Clarence de Goyler, 34, with France. Premier .Felix Gaillard called escaped death in the Inferno.. The dead were Neal, 9, Billy, an emergency cabinet meeting to4, and Kevin, 2. group deday. The right-win- g De Goyler said he was broiling manded a full hearing in the Unita chicken in the oven shortly be- ed Nations of Fjrench charges Tufore midnight when if caughtlfire. nisia has aided Algerian rebels. He said he dashed a bucket of There was a possibility Gaillard water onto the flames and the and Foreign Minister Christian fire spread over the kitchen. Pineau would seek cabinet backThe father carried' most of. the ing for an 11th hour attempt to children to safety and his wife, revive the stalemated Anglo-AmericJune 32, also escaped. offices mission. good personal income in March ws at a seasonally adjusted' annxal rate of $341,500,000,000 about under $300,000,000 February rate. The biggest 'drop in personal income was in wages and salaries which were off about one billion dollars in March from Feb- ruary to an annual rate of This decline was due to cutbacks in manuprimarily facturing, particularly in the durable goods industries. Retail Sales Off Total retail sales in March were one per cent beiow February and two per cent below March, 1957. There were these other economic levelopments: The White House announced that President Eisenhower will not act until next week on the n dollar and public works bill.. It highway said the President has not yet received complete reports from government departmente concerned with such legislation. Former President Truman took issue with President Eisenhower on how to combat the re cession. Truman was asked on his arrival here for congressional hearings next week if he believed American consumers could "buy their way out of the recession' as suggested by the President Wednesday. Truman replied "No, they've got to work to get out un Right-Winge- rs ; fourth annual .Junior Livestock Show' is ' scheduled for Morgan April 26. Officials said all boys and girl's un- .der21 years, of age may ' enter, with the only requirement being that animals shown must have up-, record books. to-da- te Three (UP)Loyal ut WASHINGTON (UP) The Atomic Energy Commission issued with Dulles. troops, striking back at, insurgents whose attacks caused nearly 100 deaths this week, have isolated the "main rebel body" in the mountains of eastern Cuba, the army announced today. Two bombs went off early this morning in different sections of Havana, but first reports did not indicate the extent of the' damage or possible victims. One of the bombs exploded in suburban Ve da do and the other in old Havana A communique said "many rebels have been taken prisoner by troops pursuing them into the Sierra Maestras where insurgent leader Fidel Castro has been hid ing out for 16 months. A government spokesman said attack" threatened for the "all-othis week by the rebels has fiz zled out, making their eventual defeat certain. He said loyal troops probably wiH be able to wipe out the last Vestiges of re sistance within two months. A rebel broadcast Thursday night called on Castro's supporters to continue fighting in this "crucial hour." The radio reported rebel attacks on Manzanillo, Bueycito and at Niquero and army outposts San Pablo, but gave no details. Capital Quiet Havana was quiet during .the night except for scattered shooting audible in suburban Vedado shortly before midnight. Authorities said: no one was hurt. At least one section of the city was still without lights, and heavy security precautions created a (Continued on Page Four) United Press Staff. CorresDondent WASHINGTON (UP) The government rcrxbrted to day that personal income and retail sales two important economic indicators continued to decline in March but at a slower rate than earlier this year. I Government economists said these figures, al&ng with unemployment and employment statistics announced earlier this week, provide new evidence that the general business decline, though continuing, is slowing dqwn. - v ;":r . ' Lana, her voice quaking and her fists, at times clenched, told dramatically the events leading up to the slaying of the hand- some Hollywood hoodlum with whom she had carried on a reckless romance from Europe to Mexico ' to the movie eapitsjL How Argument Started, Miss Turner said an argument began early on ..the 'evening of Good Friday because she wanted to go, out adone to d&nner with friends and Stompanato objected. $ Lana said she walked upstairs to her daughter's bedroom where Cheryl- was watching TV and that Stompanato followed : -'I -- ' - - 'rv . - . A - ' J ...... ' t. - - ' ' ' "- - . . ' ' ...i -- - ',.' ' a Actress Lana Turner gasps during inquest toknife which Lana's daughday in Los Angeles as deputy coroner shows eight-inc- h ter Cheryl, 14, used to end the life of Johnny Stompanaio, (UP Telephoto) DRAMA AT MURDER INQUEST i i . |