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Show w. HERALD PHONES lrov0 ' Offices FB : , " v ft! - ru - - CONTINUED FAIR today. Somewhat warmer. Hifk today 75 to SO. Low tonlfht 45 to 50. . Friday's , high in Provo area was 70, lowest Saturday 50 W. 4th N. . For Advertising, News and J 190 Circulation . , Provo Society Orem Office . ,.FR AC 84 morning- waa 49. 95 N. State 741 PRICE TEN CENTS PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958 VOL. 36, NO. 19 fV n n ' ' Ni. 111 - M o o I 1 IllllllltWWiXfi HHIMWwudjmwil ''IMMIIIIIIl .lIHII,,i7T miHIIUI) qnmeftr.t cttaaaaaf r::.';;:t::: ",PV'J Sm Weather Bureau Asks Dulles Sees Evacuation of Lovlands Danger In BULLETIN Hurricane (UPI) Surrender an Ihour this port city with a record and destruction 1 ss jLi v Jr ' ' r 4 ' , , 4 4. - 4 '4 Ike Names Persons To Adams' Job V vv - . 'r 4 t tfA t.' ,'- Hurricane Helene slashed into Myrtle Beach, S.C. Saturday winds. National Guardsmen and local police were patrolnoon with ling, the area to keep out looters and to' assist the few residents who chose to stay. Civil .Defense officials issued mandatory evacuation orders. Map shows affected area. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto), HURRICANE PATH our "H - t v WILMINGTON, pounded Deputy Assistant On Secretary Points Out White House Staff Danger in Europe If Reds Win Quemoy -- Is Given Promotion f 125-mile-an-h- N By 3 to 1 Margin st Gb nvoys National Little Rock Crack Quemoy Blockade Votes For i I By AL KAFF '. United PreSs International TAIPEI (UPi: Nationalist Chinese convoys cracked the Communist , blockade of the Quemoys . - -- O A 'J 3 Some 50 amphibious LVTs waddled ashore through a pattern of water spouts- - thrown up .by probing Red Chinese artillery as worsening weather in the Formo- sa Strait led increasingly to the belief that ' a major Communist attack in the Formosa area is unlikely, at. least for the next few months. Time Vital In Formosa Settlement UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. JPI) nA top Asian diplomat sai(f that he hopes the conflict in the For- mosa strait can be settled peace- fully. He told a group of U.N. corre- beach and three LSTs lying two miles out to, sea, delivered one of the biggest single-da- y shipments to the Quemoys since the siege began. , UPI Correspondent William Miller reported, from the U.S. 7th Fleet that Vice Adm. Wallace Mv Beakley believed the period of greatest danger had passed. He said the straight will remain rough until at least next April due jto season winds. This weather ruled out an amphibious operation rthere for some time to come. Earlier," Beakley had said he believed the 'Formdsa situation youiddeylpp into . a ng stoi mate but he was increasingly op timistic that some compromise agreement would be reached on the international level. He said the Communist Chinese did not have the naval or air forces to launch any large1 scale operation in the Formosa area. It would take two years or more with a great deal of Russian help for the! Red Chinese to gain that capability, he said. Of Saturday's convoys,- first arrived at' Quemoy at dawp and the second, loaded with 155- - mm shells, about 9:45 .m. The merciless CJommunist bombardment, entering its fifth week, showed no .signs, of a letup. The Nationalist Defense' Ministry an-- , nounced that Red guns hurled 2,974 shells', ranging in size, up-t- o 203rmm., at. the islands during the five hours between midnight and - (6-inc- h); Segregation dent Eisenhower Saturday ap-- l pointed Maj. Gen. Wilston'B. Pers sons to succeed retiring Presidential Aide Sherman Adams. The appointment was announced by White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty, who also said there would be a redistribution of responsibilities among presidential assistants but would not call it ( "reorganization." was appointed . Persons, 62, special assistant to the President" Jan. 21, 1953, the day after Eisenhower's first inauguration, and was given the title of "the deputy assistant to the Presi-dentjSept. 5, 1953 a title he holds. still Hagerty said Persons would take over the job from Adams "as soon as an orderly transition can be ' made." He said he did not know how soon Adams would be leaving and would not try to guess. Adams resigned earier this past week after he became the center bf a political storm for accepting lavish gifts from the New England lextttetyOTciBeTfiard'3old-fine- . Adams said he was acting partly to benefit the Republican polls this November. party at the Persons, ' who received an annual salary of $21,700, will be paid $22,500 in his new job. He was born at Montgomery, j ". LITTLE ROCK. 1 Ark. (UPD The people of Little ' xiock voted almost 1 Saturday to try to sidestep the U. S. Supreme Court's school integration order with Gov. Orval E.- Faubus private school system. The issue was whether the four closed high schools of Little Rock should be opened integrated or 3-- - segregated. A majority for segregation was necessary to put. the Faubus pri- , - the election was the next to last step in putting it into effect. Complete Returns Complete returns to United Press International from the 32 precincts in ihe Little Rock School District gave: Against in- Ala, Jan. 19, 1896. tegrated schools, 19,470; for integrated schools, 7,565. Segregation leaders rejoiped. "This is what we expected," Dr. Thomas J. Raney, president of the Little Rock Private Schools Corporation, which wants to take over the schools, said. "Rut now For we know. that segregation is what is wanted by the people. It re--, SEATTLE (UPI) An Army mains to be seen if this will make spokesman said Saturday the first ourJob easier." guided missile bat- v . two-thir- ds : ; 200-to- , . State . . . air-se- - semi-offici- al Ike Plays Round OfrGolf Saturday 11-nati- on ! far-reachi- ng . 81-nati- on hard-(Continu- PHILADELPHIA (UPD A jet for plane developed private use flew across the United States' Fri- oay irom raimaaie, uam., in tour hours, 20 minutes, believed a record 'for that type of aircraft. Jts buildei s, Lockheed . Aircraft, said the flight tested ' lohgrange wing fuel tanks on the Jetstar. Pilot Leo Sullivan, Marietta v Ga., said the test was a success, adding that the plane had enough fuel when' it landed here tofly an additional 600 miles. ine plane, flew an average 515 miles per hour at an altitude of ' 40,000 feet. m m A 10-sea- ter , , The Utah Legislative Council Sat- urday unanimously endorsed a proposal to allow first and second class cities to adopt the .strong mayor form of governments The proposal had been approved, earlier by a subcommittee on local government headed by State Sen. Glen M. Hatch Earlier Saturday, the council's taxation and highways committee was told the- trend for, raising , - (D-Hebe- r). ; . - nouncement of his appointment v to succeed" retiring presidential aide, Sherman Adams. Parsons was the deputy assistant to the president (Herald-UP. I Tele-phot- o) (D-Was- more tax revenue in Utah seems to be 'toward a local sales i tax and higher state property taxes. The comment was made by council director Lewis H. Lloyd and, Rep.- - Orville Gunther chairman of the commits tee on taxation anu highways. Gunther said this trend has resulted in greatef inequality in taxation' throughout Utah. He I said that under a lower property tax only a few counties share in bonanzas such as growing gas and (R-Leh- i), . . fury Saturday beaches. N.C. Helene 135-mi- Je spread Air Force In Far East WASHINGTON WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI) Hurricane 'Helene edged slowly northeastward along the coast below Wilmington Saturday, battering the Cape Fear lowlands and Carolina Beach resorts with high Europe. He. said the islands just off the winds and flood tides. In a special 11 a.m. p.d.t. bulRed Chinese mainland are the weather bureau logeographic point where the Com- letin, the center the of the massive munists "judge surrender is most cated bf 40 miles storm likely." northeast"But nonetheless the principles WUmington, moving at stake there are the principles ward at 10 miles an hour. The Weather Burefau said the upon which NATO rests," he said. center was expected to hurricane "If they are not valid and not s in the be vicinity of Cape sustained in Asia, it cannot be around midnight. confidently assumed that they are Hurricane watch was in effect valid and will be sustained in from Manteo, N.C, to the . Europe." Capes, hurricane warnings Dulles discussed the Far East crisis in an address prepared for posted from Myrtle Beach, S.C., the Atlantic Treaty Association, to Manteo. Gale warningsto were the an organization of private groups posted north of Manteo Capes. Virginia supporting the North Atlantic The Weather Bureau said tides Treaty will continue to rise on the Similar Principle coast as the storm move northeastward parallel to the His theme was that the Far coast. East crisis could not be divorced "It is imperative that all isfrom the rest of tbte world. He land beaches and costal lowlands noted that both Red China and Her' Tm&l$ary&8i&Si&tely, Cape Russia werV trying to undermine" to Cape Hatteras," the Fear securcollective the principles of Bureau said. ity by forcing the United States Weather to 120 miles an hour Gusts up to abandon Nationalist China and were clocked at Frying Pan Light get out of the Formosa area. anchored off the mouth of ship "If ' the United States should the River 40 miles Fear give in to that arrogant demand southCape of of 90 m.p.h here. Gusts in Asia, the consequences would .were in felt Wilmington by 8: 30 be felt in Western Europe," Dula.m. p.d.t. les Sj&id. Water poured into the streets of Unitthe He reemphasized that the solupopular beach resort town of ed States wants a peaceful Carolina But Beach, Wrightsville Beach tion in the Formosa Strait. Kure .and Beach. All were bat he said that if that principle ii down and evacuated under abandoned in the Far East "it tened emergency warnings and enforced is undermined everywhere." , house to bouse canvasses. ' Power lines and poles were blown down at Carolina and Kure beaches. Roofs were blown off beach houses and planking and debris was flung onto the boardwalks south-southea- A II-ty- pe h. - 1 U.S. Troops to Pull Out Of Lebanon by Oct. 17 Japan Storm Death Toll May Hit 1600 st Hat-tera- Vir-gin- ia North-Carolin- (UPI) nearby But with probably millions of damage done, the mighty storm turned out to sea and apparently the teem- ing cities bf the upper East Coast would be spared. The: weather bureau said Helene should be well out in the1 Atlantic Sunday. -- Fair-Size- d along . ' ; - a By ARNOLD DIBBLE United Press International TOKYO , (UPD The worst ty- phoon nearly a quarter of a century ripped across Japan with inr an hour winds and rainfall up to 20 inches Saturday. More than 1,300 persons were reported Bead or missing and; officials feared the toll might reach 160-mi- le 1,600. The Izu Peninsula, 50 miles southwest of Tokyo, was ravaged by the storm and rain. Officials at National Police Headquarters said raging Hoods transformed the peninsula' pleasure resorts into scenes of yiolent death and destruction. It may prove to be one of the worst single deluges in Japan's recent history, they - ) said. to Up midnight the situation was this: 110 dead and more than 1,000 known missing on Izu with officials expecting the death toll to rise to 1,400; 153 dead and 78 missing throughout the rest of the country. There were little or no communications with Izu and a policeman said "Nobody knows really just how bad the situation is." Many Carried Away Rescuers near the mouth of the raging, river snatched about 100 n watpersons from its ers, but therewas little doubt that most of the , 1,121 still missing were carried far out to sea. The., toll, is expected to mount when the storm strikes the northern island of Hokkaido. New Storm Brews Communications throughout JaFar to the south, hurricane Ilsa pan were snarled by the typhoon, built up into a mammoth hurri labeled "Ida" by the U.S. Air cane with winds of 140 miles' an Force and "No. 22 ' by the Japahour. An advisory put thajt howl nese Weather Bureau. er 435 miles northeast of San MoNo Americans were killed in the General DETROIT- (UPD on (Continued local (Continued on Page Four) Page Four) tors Corp.,! hamstrung by strikes throughout the nation, appeared ready today to settle for a nationwide strike by the United Inside the Herald Auto Workers Union. vJ GM Vice President Louis G. Seaton, chief negotiator for. the world's largest auto company, said his firm "will not go beyond 'the Ford settlement in any agreement with the union." It was ' perhaps the strongest stand taken by any firm in talks Mosquitoes. Scientists with sleuthing tendencies are digging came to and' date into the private life of our Utah County mosquitoes. Through their union the with stateof studies they hope to come up with information that may check in the wake repeated e ments by UAW President Walter the spread of disease. Joan Geyer, Herald staffer and GM and Chrysler national award winner for outstanding reporting, writes .the. story. P. Reuther that would have to give more than Read it on Page 21. Ford to reach an agreement. Football Widows. How would you like to be married to a man "If the union refuses to trim its who thinks, eats and sleeps football three' or four months per demands in line with the Ford year and then hies off to distant places to look for .players for agreement, we may have trou- the next season., Story and pictures on Page 17, leading off the ble," Seaton said. "But we al- daily society' section devoted, to Central Utah women. Cash. Nobody hit the Prizeword jackpot again this week. Thus, ready have trouble from wider spread local strikes so the threat the pot goes up to $125 for next week. See the solution to last week's of a national strike is an empty puzzle on Page 11 and the new puzzle on Page 12. And don't forget to give Prizewords a try. It's fun and it may pay you well! thing to us." The UAW is scheduled to strike Date With Destiny. If you haven't heard of the B YU Destiny GM plants throughout the nation Fund, it's time you get cued in because the big residential drive if an agreement is not reached opens Monday. Read all about it. Page 6. ,n before 10 a.m. e.s.t. Tuesday. World Series Preview. The world champion Milwaukee Braves Reuther said the union was not and the erstwhile champs, the New York Yankees, open the World asking for ; more economic gains Series Wednesday. As usual, the Herald will be the only dally fromi.GM but "there are certain newspaper to carry final results and pictures of the games the contract matters peculiar to GM day they're-played- . Keep up with the Series In the Herald. In s, which demand a solution at Gen- today's paper, read a Series preview by two of the greatest eral Motors." Birdie Tebbetts and Al Lopez. Page 16. He said these matters included Food. The seventh installment of. Lelord Kordel's provocative inequities in wages paid to work- - diet column,1 "Eat and Grow Younger," appears on Page 2. ' (Continued .on Page Four) Business Personality. Erma Jeanne Argyle's interview with Arthur L. Duckett in the "Business Personality of the Week" series " , (Page 9) features today's business page. . Colored Comics. Your favorite comic characters parade across the pages of the Sunday colored Comics. Read also Family Weekly; " the fine Herald Sunday magazine. . Road Hearing-- Ah account of the public hearing on the Interstate NEW YORK (UPD The high- freeway through the south part of the county appears on Page 3 est temperature recorded in the The Herald prints more Central Utah news fcy far than other dailies .J' v v.'vV,:. nation Friday .was at Oakland, combined. . CalifJ, where the mercury hit 105, Money in Your Pocket., You can save a lot of money, every according' to, the Weather Bureau. week, by reading the Herald ads. Only in the Herald do you find It was the "hottest in living mem- what the local merchants have to offer. Thus, you can make ycur rtadini prcflUfcli as well m' enlightening. ory" ?cl Oakland residents. ' ; . -- dirty-brow- GM, Union . Deadlocked In Dispute - Ever Pry Into Private Life of a Mosquito? l- ; two-tim- BIERUT, Lebanon (UPI) U S. officials reached "complete agreement" with the new government of Lebanon Saturday on general withdrawal of American troops. Details were not disclosed but there was no indication of a change in the Oct. 17 target date, cited by a usually reliable military source two days ago. U. S. Ambassador Robert and Armed Forces Com- Mc-Clinto- ck City Govern ment Change Wins OK iBy United Press International Major General' Wilton B. Parsons, shown at his desk in .the White House, Saturday, after the an- es Strong Mayor Form Favored Private Jet Plane 1 . ed SUCCESSOR ADAM'S miniature-size- d Air Force with the striking power of tens of thousands of World War heavy bombers has been deployed in the Far East since the Formosa Strait crisis erupted. Saturday, for the first time, the Air Force was permitted to disclose in detail the makeup pf the composite force it deployed,, in a matter of hours from eight bases in the United States. Only piecemeal information had heretofore been available. The force is now spread from the Philippines to Japan but is concentrated mainly on Okinawa. It comprises about 100 aircraft, including three types of supertalion to be sent to the Orient is sonic jet fighters. Such tactical now en route to Formosa from air command units are designed here. chiefly to suppress an outbreak The sailing date and strength of of a limited war with nuclear the battalion were not revealed al weapons tailored to knock out though a battalion normally con- military targets.. tains from 600 to 900 men. However, military men are conSen. Henry M. Jackson vinced that the Air Force's compo) described the move as site-strike unit, in conjunction further evidence of "our obvious with more numerous jet aircraft determination to provide a real aboard Navy carriers and other defense .of, Formosa." Air Force units in the Far East, "This should be a clear warn- could beat back the Chinese Red ing to the Chinese Reds to stay Air Force in conventional air warout," he said; fare. Nike-Hercul- (UPI) Secretary of State John Foster Dulles told NATO allies Saturday that surrender to Red China's arrogant demand for the Quemoy and Matsu islands would have serious consequences for western Guided Missile Battalion Leaves Formosa Area spondents from many nations that factor in to solution a the new finding "Tjhe people have spoken," He China crisis. emphasized that Arnold Sikes, Faubus' executive for the immediate futurS the best secretary said. "They very defiwajr vu. gaiu.uig tunc 10 tw kuuuuuc nitely are for segregation in 'pub.the Warsaw talks between the dawn. ' lic schools." United State s and Communist Reports from Quemoy indicated ' Faubus was scheduled to dediChina. . that Saturday's convoys delivered cate a new highway near his The diplomat, v ho asked that nearly more than the home in Huntsyfe today and bis nme and his country not be 76.5 tons of cargo that got through was not immediately available. mentioned, vras opposed to bring- the blockade Friday in the ifirst No Precedent ing the Quemoy issue into the convoy since Monday.; Even so, United Nations until other means their deliveries ! fell far short of "I certainly know of no prece- of hegotiaon have been exhaust- the islands' n needs. 'dent where a community 'decided daily .' ; ed. ' , In addition to Saturday's sea con- to determine . by an election this veteran u. N. delegate voy, a flight of supply planes airon (Continued Page Four) comes from a country that is often dropped an1 unstated quantity of described as "neutral" but which food to the isolated troops Friday .prefers to be considered a country night "The air shipment included Nasser Proclaims l. committed neither to the East nor cigarettes and "moon cakes" for the West: Saturday's celebration of Moon of Emergency In Coincidentally, his view that the Day. ... China affair should be kept out of one of China's three United Arab Republic big holidavs. the" United Nations as long as posa An 1 search CAIRO President (UPI) sible was supported by another the seas around the ,fleet scoured all Quemoys Gamal Abdel Nasser. Saturday Asian diplomat whose government Fridaf ,night and in Saturday a state of emergency hasirm ties with the West. a vain search for additional sur- proclaimed United in the Arab .Republic. Observers got the impression vivors' of an LVT- in Which four No reason was given for the that a number of U.N. delegations or five. Chinese and Japanese was decree. announced It that have played leading parts in newsmen are believed to have' by the Middle East news preserving peace in various trou- perished. . agency and later confirmed by ble, spots in' the past werefirmly the government information de of the opinion that there should be '.' no hurry about bringins(y:he China partment. land extended his Nasser also issue into the United Natons. reform scheme, which takes from They argued that if it must come 'to the Unitei Nations soon thejrich and gives tQ the poor, to the Syrian region of U. .A. R. It it should come before the WASHINGTON Presi- was Nasser's most (UPI) Security Counci rather than the General Assembly, where dent Eisenhower went to Burning project in Syria since Syria joinTree Country' Club Saturday ed with Egypt" in ' February to unfettered debate might only for a round of golf. establish the U A. R. on Page Four) tftme : is the important Mass. BOSTON, Presi WASHINGTON (UPI) , , X B(shs Q)UnDT( oil production and other rapidly growing industries. Lloyd reported - 1 that while mander Adm. James L. Holloway discussed the, situation with Premier Rashid Karami. It was the first .formal meeting they, had had with him and both sides indicated it was most cordial. McClintock said afterward that he and Karami werein "complete agreement on both the timing and details of the evacuation." U. S. Marines first landed In Lebanon July 15 at the request of former President Camille Cham-ou- n who was threatened with a full scale rebellion. The size of U. S. forces built up to 14,200 Aug. 11. Since then, three Marine battalions and 400 soldiers have withdrawn, leaving about 9,000 still here. During that time Lebanon has changed its government by peaceful means. The new government of President Fuad "Chehab and Premier Karami took over Tues- : :.'-'day. V McClintock said his and Hollo-way- 's visit to Karami Saturday was "a courtesy call to pay our respects and tell Karami that we wanted to offer his government our full , support and help in ' achieving his aims." Utahns' income has increased 600 per cent in the past 20 years, assessed values have gone up 2.5 times, income and corporation taxes 10 times. He. said the sales tax has- - increased ,700 per cent, while prop-- ; erty tax received gained only 381 .'There was no disagreement between the Prime Minister and per cent. i Gunther . said his committee will ourselves or the President," he aid. (Continued ca Page Four) . ' : , base-baller- - Mercury Hits 105 In Oakland - - 1 |