OCR Text |
Show HERALD PHONES Orem of flee ..... t .... ".AC ProTO Offices . ... . . . . . FR For Advertising, News y and Circulation '. , . FR Proyo Society i,z New Herald Building Located at 4th North & 2nd West 05 V 50 PARTLY CLOUDY Continued throurh Thursday.J warm. Hlfh both pays 8S to 93, Low tonirht U to 84 EIGHTY-FIFT- YEAR NO 214 H PROVO. UTAH COUNTS UTAH. President Sounds Caution Mb MANHUNT. FOR Ike Believes Recess non Has Its oirce peni TURNS TO COUNTY ESCAPEE J WASHINGTON (UPI) President Eisenhower said today, he believes the recession has largely! spent its force. But he cautioned against apy optimism that a healthy economic upturn would occur in the near future. He told a news conference that some of the economic indices point tcPan upturn. But he said one swallow does not make a summer., J Some parts of the national economy, such as the auto Indus- - House Okehs Statehood For Alaska WASHINGTON (UPI) The House today passed a bill to admit Alaska to the union as the 49th and other durable goods tries, still are ' not doing too well, he said. On the whole, he said, the nation is weathering the recession '! well. In other news conference remarks, the President: Said that as of now the economic situation does not warrant antirecession tax cuts that would greatly increase the federal budget deficit, 6tate. -- " Wants Sound Dollar Said he would deplore attempt But peacetime any to control mDD tail Saturday. if ' v I ' .. BULLETIN , j. J PARIS (UPI) President Rene Oty will announce lit o p. m., tfie name of France's new premier-designa(7 p. m., p.d.t.), an Elysee Palace spokesman said today. By JOSEPH W. GRIGG v Jresiaent Kene joty- - oday .takis iv fi) Geri. Charles De Gaulle to Paris possibly to take over leadership of France. Informed sources said Coty had won agreement from the Catholic Popular Republicans and" Independent conservatives jfor De Gaulle to become premier. Together, the two parties control 175 votes in the National jft te 2nd Vanguard Failure Navy Rocket. Fails to 1 595-memb- Reach Orbit 5 The general headed at once for Paris from his home at O mod-erat- IP5 w ' "rsv.:e& .i r M. x- - France - support t..v . certainly Democrat Bids For GOP Suooort SACRAMENTO (UPI) almost entirely to domestic mat , ters, The President mostly was in a serious and calm mood. But there were several5 chuckles, including one when a reporter identified himself as representing United Press! International. As to his decision against a tax cut, he said that s question in which a tax reduction was identi fied as an antirecession measure appeared to be loaded. He said he was not so sure that it would have an antirecession effect. The President said he and his (Continued on Page Four) f i i i House GrouDr Backs Ike 'No Tax Gut' Stand ( General "Edmund G. Brown hinted today that he would retain some of the Republicans who now hold offices appointed by the gov ernor if he were elected to sue ceed Gov. Goodwin J. Knight. WASHINGTON The (UPI) Democrat Brown, in a formal House Ways and Means Commit pi here. ; said he tee supported President Eisenhow would "certainly hope to have the er's "no tax cut" stand today by rs i n col an confidence of able VVUUOVl bill an administration approving oeoole already experienced in the to extend present corporation and operation of the complex machin- excise taxes for another year. ery of our state government." was by a vote of 21 ' in what might be interpreted as to Approval 2 after the committee had rea bid for Republican backing in jected, 19-a proposal to cut the his election fight with GOP Sen federal excise tax on automobiles William F. Knowland for the gov from 10 to 7 per cent. emor's chair. Brown said he hoped The President, meanwhile, told to "guide our state in the great his news conference he believes - tradition of Earl Warren and Hi the recession has spent most o; ram Johnson." its force, and that a tax cut now Both Warren and Johnson are would not be warranted. His top former Republican governors economic advisers, told CongVess Browri also charged that Know if leurrent tax rates are n land "with his backward attitudes continued, ah .8 to 10 billion dol and 'go it alone' approach" would lar deficit is .likely in the fiscal "Dossiblv "'wipe out" the steps year starting" July 1. taken by Wa.rren and Johnson The lopsided- - Ways and Means Committee yote was interpreted as giving strong impetus to a bi partisan drive by the administra tion and congressional leaders to hold the tax line. i j I 2, that-eve- Three Air Force Jet Pilots Meet Deah In Crash Three Tues killed were Air Force pilots as collided day when two jets Cannon Air hnth aooroached Force Base for landings. an Orwi iet was attempting because emergency landing radki failure. Both planes were aoPRoaching under visual flight CLOVTS, N. M. (UPI) Explorers and IDT, gigantic which weighs 11-- 2 Sputnik tons. Dr. John P. Hagen, director of the Vanguard Project who came to this launching base to observe rocket the event, eaid the to well function appeared the of three all firing through stages but still did not result in an orbit." In Washington, Dr. Richard W. Porter, chairman of the IGY sat ellite program, issued an identi cal statement to newsmen who had kept a vigil with him. Porter said another Vanguard would be fired next month. According to initial calculations the satellite reached "a peak altitude of about 2,000 statute miles at its zenith and fell back to j : earth," Hagen said. On April 28 the Vanguard was (Continued on Page Four) 72-fo- ot j o - im D GAULLE MEMORIE S REVIVED As Gen. Charles de Gaulle headed for Paris today on the invitation of president Rene Coty, amid reports that Coty has wonthe support of two parties f or de Gaulle to become Premier, President Eisenhower told his news conference in Wa shington that he had a long experience of friendly contact with the General. The President refused to attempt an analysis of what de Gaulle's rise to power would mean for the West. Here, in a 1945 file photo, the tfien Gen. Eisenhower, left, receives from Gen. de Gaulle the sword made for Napoleon Bonaparte when he was nominated first consul of the Republic, at a dinner in Paris in Eisenhower's honor. (UPI Telephoto) EISENHOWEJl-D- E Eisenhower Signs Bill New Stamp Rate Goes Into Effect Aug. 1 4-Ce- nt 'The (UPI) and local stamp for letters definitely goes into WASHINGTON out-oMo- four-cen-t Read Stan's Postcard From Orient effect Aug. 1. President Eisenhower signed a bill Tuesday which raises both postal rates and wages. First class letters will be increased from 3 to 4 cents. Air mail will be hiked from 6 to. 7 cents. It will be the first increase in first-clamail gates since 1932. The President said thej bill's "public interest" features, outweighed its objectionable provisions. But he said several provisions caused him "grave concern," ' including one which would assess the Treasury for an "excessive amount of postal services costs" instead of levying them against users of the mails. He said these postal services would cost about 100 million dollars a year and "logically and equitably" should have been j financed through proper rates of postage. Other presidential objections were "failure of the Congress to sufficient revenues to provide meei the full cost .of operating the postal service," and a salary structure for postal workers ss Are you getting Stan Dela-plane- 's "Postcard" from the Orient The star Herald editorial page columnist is now in the Far East, and his columns are loaded with interesting facts about the people, dress, menus, and customs of Japan, China and other countries of the "Far East. And each column, of course, is replete with that famous Delaplane humor, which is such a refreshing change of pace in this era of problems and troubles. Columnist Stan Delaplane's at his best when he's travel-m- g. Be surejto on the Herald d j-ea- torial page. Jiis-daily-colu- mns edi- . . Nation to Honor 2 Unknown Soldiers7 WASHINGTON (UPI) The nation's two new "Unknown S o returned to their native shores today to receive reverent honors seldom equaled in the capital city's long history of pomp and parades rule. altitude After their official arrival from "collided low at Tfriy as the destroyer Blandy, .the bodies and fell to the ground almost .one piece of wreckage, and burn- of the' unidentified warrior heroes a World .War I soldier in the down the gangway of the ship Tomb of the Unknown Sol- and two hearses for place them-idier at Arlington, "in honored the ride to the Capitol. As the glory, known but to God." A third "unknown" also from cortege .starts to move, the salutsaWorld War II was buried at sea ing .battery will fire a off: the Virginia Capes with full lute The bodies will lie in state in military, honors Monday after the final selection phase of the cere- the Capitol rotunda until Friday mony was completed. A Navy afternoon, when President Eisenwere scheduled to receive the enlisted hero of the Korean War hower will lead the cation in payed. . Air Force officials' identified highest, most solemn tributes of chose between the t unmarked ing tribute at Arlington. ) the victims as Capt. William R air officialdom and all the peo- caskets of an unknown from the Officials i estimated that the Y. FriN. before reburial their of Interlaken, . ple Gilmore, 30, European theater and one from number of .visitors filing 4 through Cemein T. Ikeda,-- 28, 1st Lt Leslie the Pacific aboard the guided the rotunda during the three-da- y Arlington National day ; missile cruiser Canberra. Honolulu, Hawaii, and, 1st Lt tery. period might run into the hunOne was a veteran of World William R. Jarman; 24, a 1956 Orders called for . body bearers dreds of thousands, especially U. S. Military Academy graduate War IL The other died in the to slowl$ bear , the caskets, led during this heavy period of WashKorean fighting. They will flank by Utt World War II unknown, ington' tourist season. from North Arlington, Va. - : ha4-low- ed -- , 21-g- , - . . De if know would Gaulle's time had arrived. Police took elaborate precautions at Oolombey for keep news men from trailing De uauiie Roads were! blocked for, 15 minutes. For the Sfirst time, an escort car from France's FBI, the Sur- ete General, accompanied D e j Gaulle. At that very moment tens of Gaulle dem thousands of anti-onstrators surged into the Place de la Bastille where the French revolution of 1789 erupted. For- j un mer Premier - Pierre Mendes-Franc- e, head of the Radical (mod- erate party i, was among them. "Fascism shall not pass," the crowd chanted in a rolling cresr cendo that drowned out f rush-hou- traffic. "Lohg live' the Republic." Coty was! acting with all possible haste. Earlier in the afternoon he conferred for tjwo' hours with leaders of three of France's middle-lin-e parties. . Tunisia May Press Charge Against France f Fear Of Violence Informed sources said the;. call to De Gaulle was issued after the Catholic Republicans Popular (MRP) and! independents had as UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) sented to asking De Gaulle to Tunisian Ambassador Mongi form a government. The Socialists, who have oppos Slim sought instructions from his him ed up to now, which pay of lower government today on whether to were saidenergetically to have delayed their salaried - workers, whereas, some press a charge against France in decision pending consultations top bracket employes got no in- the United Nations. Security with 'their parliamentary group crease at all. this evening. The Socialists have Tunisian President Habib Bour- The penny boost in letter 100 votes, Monday that his charges is the main item in the guiba announced was said to have appealed would in government rate increase package, biggest bring France to Coty three all parties to accept De history and expected to bring in before the council as --a result of Gaulle before the nation is plungan extra 550 million dollars an- newed clashes with F r e n c hJ ed into chapsx and possible bloodnually when all its provisions forces, particularly last weekend.' shed. Slim, after consulting 'with Sec take effect. The sources said Coty warned also new law The gives pay retary - General Diag ILammar- - the three political leaders that if raises of 265 million dollars a skjold, talked privately with most De Gaulle his only rejected they year to 520,000 pcstal workers, of the 11 members of the Secu alternative would be to summon rity Council Tuesday and then Francois retroactive to last Jan. 1. Mitterand, 42, member (Continued on Page Four) of the small Moderate Leftist Resistance Union to form a "popular front", government that would include the communists, Refused Resignation Coty was said to have told the party leaders such a step would be raises ' j . t i j Italian Reds Seek Return To Coalition The Italian Com munist party made a new bid for a "popular front" with, Socialists today: aimed at crippling any government set up by the Chris tian Democrats. Communist Party Boss Palmiro Togliatti, playing on the fears of g socialists (PSD the Christian the from stemming Democratic . election gains, said the Communists were ready to "reach an understanding with all those who move in the same di rection with us." It was a pitch for a return to the extreme left coalition which fell apart after the Soviet Red Army crushed the Hungarian re volt in the fall of 1956. . If it succeeded, it could cause any future government trouble since the Christian Democrats did not . win an absolute majority in either house of parliament. In the elections held Sunday and Monday, the Christian Demo crats ; won 42.4 per a cent of the popular vote, up 2.4 per cent from the 1953 general elections. It gave them 122 seats in the Sen ate, one Jess than a majority, but an increase of 12 over 1953. They won 273 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, up 12 from 1953 but 23 short of a majority. ,, , UAW Asking For Mediation In ) hisj conscience and that would he resign rather than do Labor Dispute ROME (UPI) against ' that. DETROIT (UPI) The United Aut6 Workers today asked the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to step' in to end deadlocked, final-hobargaining with General Motors, but the company said it is opposed to . ur left-win- " striving desperately t o find an escape from the threat of a military jdictatorsbip or a communist grab for power, began his crucial I conferences at ,4 a.m. He refused to accept Premier Pierre Pfliknlin's resignation un-- ( Continued on Page Four) Coty, . Hoard Valued Sd I Ice es j O ch ncanpiard s, Colomlbey-lesdeux-Eglise- miles away. De Gaulle's apparent moment of destiny arrived just as an estimated 100,000 leftists and marched across Paris protesting his rise toward power. Roads Are Blocked would It take De Gaulle's chauffeur about two hours to make the trip. It would probably be several hours after that before an anxious 150 le - er Assembly.! J&l. 1 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (UPI) The Navy reported early today hat the full-scasatellite launch ed Tuesday night with the Vanguard rocket shoL 2,000 miles into which space but at an caused it to plunge back to earth. 20-in- : T StiooTraoTraoGiidd : versed. on Opponents then concentrated comto back trying to send it mittee. Just before the bill won approvcall vote al, the "Souse on a roil to. recomdefeated the final effort mit H to committee-- -a move that would have almost at this cesdeath meant the hill's sion of Congress. cri Expected to Take Over Franck of Leadership off-ang- le ; PRICE ;FTE CENTS WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1958 POINT OF THE MOUNUtah authoriTAIN (UPJ) ties continued their watch for escaped convict Virgil Allen McDorman today after fruitless searches in Iron and Utah counties. The Utah Highway Patrol said two truck drivers reported seeing a man answering McDorman's description in the two counties, but a search of the areas turned up no trace of the missing felon. McDorman escaped from a Utah State Prison work de- he said he the hotly contested wages and prices. atfeels both must be that strongly j measure alter defeating two to down comin held main j.an effort tempts to send it back to costs tain a and stable living mittee. sound . Senate dollar, to the now bill goes The Declined to comment on the and burn. where it was expected to have a crises in France and Lebanon. But .It was the second consecutive of passage. chance good ailure of the Vanguard to blast House roll call vote was 208 he did say he happened to like i fully instrumented :The sat a voted "pres- - Gen Charles! de Gaulle (The c: n w mvmihp-WJ iXW. Tum " : into Pressatellite ellite the orbit, rench general appears headed ent." - ident Eisenhower talked about for control of the French govern- in. The House acted over the op1955 when he first announced ; and ment. ) this position of Republican leaders GOP country's space program ior of Reaffirmed his southern Democrats. Top International the Geophysical members had voted previously to pending legislation that would Year. grant statehood to Alaska. He said recommit the measure to the both The vanguard was fired at 8:46 oolitical' nartrac aHvontv1 House Interior Committee despite statehood p.m. p.d.t it pierced a puff of in their 1956 campaign President Eisenhower's personal clouds and in about two minutes and those pledges should bill. no was pleas on behalf of the of GOP platforms longer visible. be carried out. The statehood bill Tuesday, the coalition At it appeared the launch first was tentatively killed in the House , leaders and eoutherntheDemocrats was successful and that the ing i House to Tuesday; succeeded in getting hot the Because ofjjhe Presidents re satellite would Join est- - space mboaT tentatively JdlL the. measure by put fusal, to discuss the French crisis, into orbit last March 17, the two striking rout its enacting; clause. rt.w action was re-- his news conference was devoted D..4- it approved . . at $270,000 8 TONS SILVER DOLLARS FOUN DIN THE BASEMENT He Lik es De Gaulle WASHINGTON Presi(UPI) dent Eisenhower aid today he likes Gen. Charles 'de Gaulle, the military leader who! appears headed for control of Ute French govj ernment,' The President r?caUed at his news conference thpt he had had a friendly association with De Gaulle in the past. He said he was one of those who lke. the French general." .fr"it r; V,.4 f The President' ilatlv refusort. however, to atteirip any analysis of what effect De Gaulle's likely rise to power in France would have on French relations with the United States and! other western I powers. Eisenhower opened his weekly hews conference with a statement that crises still plague France and Lebanon. JltoerHore, he said, it was inadvisable for him to dis-cuss either topic, he told re- porters not to ask him to. In other" foreigri news confer-th- e ence dcelopmentl, Presi- dent: Said the world situation seems to callfor pore intensive review of current U. S.- international responsibilities than might normally be the . fase. He1 said every day there aire conferences to determine what jbew duties and responsibilities. fall Ion. the U.S. at . resunti ot particular world events. He said thajt was because the U.S. has no thought of es tablishing a policy And then mere ly standing by it without constant study. Declared that the U.S. must not adopt dictatoriaL Communist- type policies in efforts to in- M nuence ames wnf are having trouble. He said the U. S. must observe the principle lof live and let live, while trying fib exercise influence by persuasion. The President said current diplomacy is et-(Continued on Page Four) - -H i - i - 4 No Deci sion Exp ecte din Major R dees SACRAMENTO (IUPI) Alan , Cranston, Democratic candidate for controller, predicted' today that none of the races lor California's major political offiles will be 'decided in next wlek's primary election. Cranston said no ;andidate from either party will 'even come close"---tsweepinj both namina- tions and avoiding a November run-of- f. Several Republican incumbents in lesser statewide offices, includ ing Cranston's opponent; Controller Robert C. Kirkwood, have hopes of winning the Democratic nominaspare time friding around with law tion in addition ioj the GOP bid enforcement officers. He main and thus 'winning .reelection in the ' 5 nrlmnrw." tained a fleet of But Cranston sld that won't Cadillacs In which he patrolled . Houston streets at night. happen. The wo pirty system has The Houston Press said persons been in Califor knowing1 about the cache reported nia, he said, and Democratic vot- -' it was discovered Friday, but did ers will cast their jballots for their not make: the disclosure until party instead of voting on the ' basis of individual! candidates. Tuesday. Cranston also predicted that th The Press said the dollars were transferred to a bank in armored Democrats woul4 show more cars and tellers worked over the strength than the Be?clbcac3 ia weekend trying to stack th ocias. I the primary. . HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) ' Eight tons of silver dollars have been ound in a basement cache of . a late millionaire who liked to play policeman in a radio- - equipped 5 : Cadillac. The cache belonged to James M. (Silver Dollar Jim) West, who died Dec. 18. Its exact value was not revealed, but it was believed to be around $270,000. West, who liked to hand out silver dollars to friends and acquaintances, spent most of his . . " 1 radio-equippe- - d . "re-establishe- d" " ' " ' |