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Show Herald Telephones For Ads, News, Circulation: . Partly Cloudy Provo Office, 190 W, 4th N. FR Of em Office, 741 N. State , through Friday. A UUIe warmer this afternoon. Ilifh both days 30 AC 5X605 For Society..... EIGHTY-SIXT- ...... FR 70 to 76. 84 YEAR, NO. 189 H PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1959 en a ire Va res Qf Rig ililS in abor PRICE FIVE CENTS DULLES NAMED SPECIAL CONSULTANT . (UPI) WASHINGTON President Eisenhower today appointed John Foster Dulles, his former secretary of state, By ALVIN SPIVAK United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. John F. Kennedy. said today he labor reform bill's new "bill of would result in "a potential 16 million amendment rights" lawsuits" the government. and chief sponsor of the labor Kennedy, also the amendment would make that measure, charged bill "a tool of Communists, employer stooges and the CD-Mas- s.) ag-ains- t co-auth- or u o ; as a special consultant on foreign affairs., The White House post pays $20,000 a year. The appointment was announced a few moments before the President left for Walter Reed Hospital where Dulles was to be sworn in at a private ceremony. Dulles resigned as secretary because of cancer. h&m Massachusetts Reformatory (D-Ark- 47-4- .), Soviet Hints No Concession Riot Quelled " pletely quelled. At the same time, Peiping bitterly attacked India for the second straight day and suggested it keep, out of Tibetan affairs, ' New China The Communist News Agency said that when the rebellion was crushed in. Lhasa Chinese troops were "ordered to take punitive military action the Tibetan clique of against For the West x . hel-met- ed -- traitors." " 1 r. s f usi If' i- "V-t- - it i 9 vrs: i ' i ... is. lMW'lf ll l4-- t " t-- 'II : 4 t$ r Villi , Damage Near 'S L ' i s il hree Killed, 5 Injured I n Kansas City B last I .KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UPI) Three men were killed and five injured today when an explosion sent flames high into the air and destroyed the Thompson-HaywarChemical Co., plant here, F. R. President Company Thompson said the damage would " approach one million dollars. About 10 chemical tanks, one large concrete block building with a metal roof, and several smaller were involved in the buildings blast. It apparently occurred in a mixing center where a weed killer, 2,4-is made. One of the steel tank was blown of a block away. d D, V tation at the point where she was pulled from the ditch, 515 E. 6th E. about a mile from where she fell in the water. The child was found by her mother, who had missed her and hunted along the ditch. It was estimated she had been missing only about 15 minutes. Plot Revealed To Kill Castro NEW YORK (UPI) KUTILE EFFORT TO SAVE CHILD Orem Fire Ch;ef Scott Thompson makes desperate effort with, resusci-tatto save life of little Kaaren Treshow of Orem after she had been pulled from irrigation ditch today noon. Mrs. Dean B. Bagley, Orem Police Chief Reed Burgener (right) and Officer Clyde Kallas also are visible in picture. Mrs. Bagley rendered respiration or mouth-to-mou- th until the fire department arrived. (Herald staf photo by Grant Bartholomew) Police Firemen did not recover the bodies of the three victims until two and one half hours after the blast. The victims were identified as: James M. Lewis 28, Kansas City, Kan. Walter L. Evans, 25, Kansas 1 City, Mo. Otis J. Young, 24, Liberty, Mo. Lewis and Evans were working on the balcony of the main building where pressure vessels were kept. Young was last seen driving into the plant as he reported to work on a shift change. All three bodies were found in the " heart of the blast. ' The injured were not seriously ' ; The blast occured about 6:45 a.m. and for two hours a thick column of boiling, grey - blacir smoke poured high in the air and created a dark haze between the f two Kansas Cities, Strontium-9- 0 yi 1 rs Permissible AlV'f- ' Million $1 to- day received a tip from the Cuban government that six men had been sent here as part of a plot to assassinate Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. A memorandum sent out this morning to all police commands said the men had arrived in New York from Philadelphia, Chicago and Florida. Five of the men, brothers, were reported to have arrived in a gray Cadillac, bearing Michigan plates. The sixth man was said to have arrived in a car with Florida plates. Amount Hiked j No Hope For jobless Pay SMOKEY AFTERMATH OF EXPLOSION Giant column of smoke rises from ruins Chemical Company in Kansas City after explosion, heard of Thompson-Haywar- d throughout Greater Kansas City 'area,, ripped through the plant. (He raid - UPI ;, Telephoto) hurt. Kaaren Treshow, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike' Treshow, 744 E. 400 S., Orem, drowned in an irrigation ditch ' today about noon, after she fell in the ditch from her tricycle in front of her home. her A doctor pronounced dead after police and firemen had vainly attempted resusci- - : " Orem Girl Drowned In Ditch . Allied Unity a li three-quarte- L . Herter Feels Optimistic On ed o. ' It said the - Red army swept across hundreds of miles in 10 days of action and wiped out the rebel nests at one stroke. It claimed 2,000 Tibetans wounded or captured in the drive. It was Communist China's first official admission of the extent to which the Tibetan rebellion had spread. Tibetan refugees had reported a massive Red .Chinese army drive southwest from Lhasa "SecrWASHINGTON (UPI) toward Nepal. of State Christian A. Herter etary 4' ty-on- el Peiping indicated the big battle ended only a few days ago and that the Red army' now controls all the key points in southern Tibet. But it indicated the rebels are still operating outside towns and . villages. It said Communist troops were hunting, down "a few remnant bandits who have fled to remote mountainous areas." Red China's description of the battle for southern Tibet indicated the Tibetan's " control of the vast region was far more extensive than was originally believed, . ed , often-convict- j anti-Commun- ist . gas-mask- it i (UPI) Pelping Radio vicclaimed "tremendous today tories" in a Red Chinese army offensive against Tibetan forces and said the rebellion in Lhasa had been com- M f '' issue. Kennedy said it'.was "clear that . ..good intentions overcome good sense." He hoped it was not too LONDON (UPI) The Soviet late "for the Senate to make this Union made it bill fair and workable." plain today the A CONCORD, Mass. (UPI) can West no expect Senate Democratic Leader Lynmajor concesmutiny in Concord Reformatory don B. Johnson said the Senate sions in Berlin at the forthcoming convict was would led by a drink-craze- d step up its pace for the foreign ministers .conference ; in crushed in four hours by uncom- remainder Geneva. of , the week to promising state police and prison a final vote on the Kennedy-Ervi- n speed Soviet diplomats said' Moscow authorities. f was determined to stand fast by bill A force of 125 its plan to hand over West Berlin Other congressional news: troopers armed with riot Filthy mail: Postmaster General to the Communist East German guns stormed the prison dining Arthur E. Summerfield told a regime regardless of any settleroom and a cell block behind ; a House post office subcommittee ment for the Western party of barrage of tear gas shells "defiant barons of- - obscenity" car- the city. A series of Soviet diplomatic Wednesday, subdued the convicts ry on a 500 million dollar a year and rescued 15 hostages. It was mail order business in filthy lit- moves emphasized the tough 'the second revolt in Massachu- erature. He said they contribute stand the Russians were taking setts prisons in six weeks. ; ; to juvenile delinquency by "cal- before the May ,11 conference bethe lously ' dumping into the hands of gins. Already the Soviets were Fif e among prisoners 440 inmates were ' involved in the our children, through our mail accusing the West of trying to uprising, officials said. Five were boxes at home, unordered lewd torpedo the talks. named as ringleaders. .Authorities material, as well as samples soliWednesday, Russia accused the into all United States of trying to wreck question today planned citing the sale of even more objec' " , volved. Geneva conference by steptionable pictures, slides, films and the ping up" missile base construction The revolt, termed by officials related filth." an escape attempt, was touched Appointments: The S e n a t e in Europe although the missile off by Charles (Bull) Martin, 38, Armed. Services Committee ap- program is two years old. U. S. State Department Spokesrobber. ; an proved President Eisenhower's , Lincoln man White called the acof Genl, nomination L. Lyman Leader Has Pistol of substance" to cusation "devoid Lemnitzer be chief of Army A prison official told United noted and the Russians The staff. also committee apusually Press International the whole upstatements made such of three propaganda proved reappointment because rising apparently began East-We- st Martin was "crazy drunk." The holdover members of the Joint on the eve of important of Staff Gen. Nathan F. meetings. official said the convict repeated- Chiefs Soviet Union, backed by The Gen. Thomas of Twining, chairman; lemon stole small quantities ly D." East Germany, also built a major White, Air Force chief of staff, extract, which has a high alcohol around campaign content, from the prison kitchen; and Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chief propaganda high-levS. Ah Force U. flights saved it up and went on a spree of naval operations. to and from Berlin although such Labor: who senators Several , Wednesday. Martin was the only mutineer missed Wednesday's close roll call flights have been going on for who was armed. Where he got the arrived today to provide reinforce- months. Wednesday's accusations were .22 caliber pistol he carried was ments for Kennedy on other labor in a note handed to contained ; newsmen issues. told ' that Kennedy not known. ' The other four S. Ambassador U. las McClellan' Llewellyn was amendment ringleaders were Moscow in belled a of union "bill for by Soviet Thompson rights" identified as Thomas Carlino, PeAndrei Gromy-kMinister of but who "most those Foreign ter Markarewicz, Lawrence "Wood members U. S. of the It said iri .. are it. of those talked supply support and Russell (Red) Halliday. to West missiles who voted have always Germany, TurAuthorities said there was apagainst Greece and of the working man.' key endangered sucparently a vague plan to reach the interests Geneva of cess the McClellan was backed on his meeting. The the main entrance of the reformais that the NATO s Western position tory. At one point Martin told amendment by an . almost-- olid were strengthened o nly Supt. Edward S. Grennan bluntly, lineup of Republicans and south- nations V ern Democrats, plus three Demo- against Communist threats. "I want out." deThe day before, the Soviet crats from other. areas. Taken By Force . a similar warning to West livered no a Similar or had This take grievances. support,' give "They on on (Continued Germany. (Continued Page Four) Page Four) . on TOKYO 4 trouble-makers- ." The Senate passed the amendment, sponsored by Sen. John L 6 McClellan by a vote late Wednesday. A motion to reconsider failed by a single vote, with Vice President Richard M. Nixon breaking a deadlock on the P India Bitterly Attacked B y G h i ri ese Com m u n i sts : v . Low tonlrht 40 to 4S. Legislation Seven Killed By TOM NELSON United Press International , WASHINGTON (UPI) Organized labor's .No. 1 proposal for jobless pay legislation appeared today to be destined for rejection 2-C- ar by the House Ways & Means Committee. Signs also pointed to a turndown by the committee of the PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI) Seven persons were killed in a Eisenhower administration's bid program to cover grinding two-ccrsh Wednesday compensation when one of the adtos containing 3,200,000 more workers. These were understood to be five persons was .struck broadside views of "a majority of the comas it turned off lighway mittee after it recessed closed-doo- r about .eight miles east of here. sessions on the legislation All occupants in both cars were and instructed its Wednesday fatally injured. to draft a bill reflecting its staff California ' highway patrolmen said a car driven by Jean M.F. sentiments. No formal votes will be taken Deluz, 50, Anaheim, Calif., until the committee acts on the smashed , into the turning auto draft in about 1Q days. That driven by Jack W. Friedman, 72, staff draft could be altered considera Banning, Calif. Patrolmen said the bly, .but members said it apDeluz car was speeding. No skid the committee would: marks were found at the scene? peared Refuse to approve a federal "We had to call two trucks to standard for the amount and durpull the cars apart," said Sgt. ation of benefits which .must be I.I. Baldwin. paid by the states,, the main goal The dead were, in the Friedman of organized labor in this field. car, Friedman and his wife', MarProvide only a token extentha, about 65; their housekeeper sion of coverage to several thou-wit- h Mrs. Nora Pearl Baker, about 65 the 3,200,000 sought by the Horace Potter, 74, and his wife, administration.- Ruth, about 70, of Banning. Boost the share of the tax on In the Deluz car, Deluz was employers whici is earmarked kliled along with his passenger for the federal fund, which fiGertrude Veltre, 40, Arcadia, nances administrative costs and Calif. loans to states, from 0.3 per cent T of the payrollt o 0.4" per cent." In California Crash ar s . 60-70-- 90 Thor Missile Gone Found . - -- , U. S. Behind Russ is optimistic the Western "Allies wiU reach Agreement on strategy for negotiating With Russia on the Berlin and German problems. This. was reported today by as-- : ' sociates of the new secretary, who " said Herter believes the Paris! meeting next week of Western-ministerwill be able to agree on most of the package proposal the Allies hope to present to Russia at . the Geneva conference 'starting '" May 11. .t. Top officials here acknowledged that American, British, French and West German, diplomatic experts, who have been meeting in London the past 10 days, have yet to achieve full accord. - , However, they" said they expected the differences to be 'narrowed' and most of them solved by. the Western foreign ministers at their Paris sessions beginning Wednes' : day. CAPE CANAVERAL,, Fla. (UPI) Thor intermediate range ballii-- . tic missile with a tape recorde1 in its nose cone made a 1,500-mil- e flight early today and a recovery team picked up the ejected instru- A ment package. The Air Force said the data capsule was the fourth recovered from Thor nose cones. About .s'x Thors have carried the packages ' on, test flights. " ' The data capsules 'float on the ocean's surface, and a light on the top attracts the' recovery team to its location. . : WASHINGTON T h e (UPI) National Committee of Radiation Protection has doubled the aociount of sTrontium-9- 0 it says the human body may carry without exceeding "permissible" levels. It also has increased .by 25 per cent the recommended maximum permissible cor centration of strontium-90 in water and foods. But it reduced the amount for air by 50 per cent. Strontium-9- 0 is the most feared d of radioactive menaces in fallout from nuclear explosions. It concentrates in bones where enough of it can cause cancer. The amount of radiostrontium in U. S. milk and other foods, and in the bones of people, recently has been increasing as a result of American and Russian bomb tests last year. It is still far below permissible levels, however. A report issued by the Columbia University LaMont Geological Observatory shows that the concentration of Strontium-9in the bones of children had doubled between 1955" and 1957. The increase was from 0.56 strontium units in 1955, to 0.67 in 1956, to 1.33 in 1957. The NRCP report raises the permissible level in the body from 100 to 200 stronthim units. . long-live- , " 0 EDENS VISIT PARIS PARIS (UPI) Former British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden and his wife were in Paris today for a three-da- y visit. Eden said his visit was "strictly private." Civil Defense ' Training Program HERALD INDEX WASHINGTON (UPI) A con- gressional committee says the United States has fallen far behind Russia in civil defense training against nuclear attack The House Government Operations Committee told Congress in a "report Wednesday night that the "whole Russian population" is being trained in atomic defense. The United States, however, remains relatively unprepared tj protect Americans from the same danger, the; committee said. Amusements Central Utah News Classified Comics Editorial National, Society Sports Stocks .3, 5, 13, 16 21-2- 3 ...... ... ........ ....... . ; ". ': .... 10 . . . 11 ; World News Obituaries . 5 ... 2, 12, 21 18-1- 9, ........... 4 14-1- ...................... 5 .8-- 9 ..........4 Billy Graham Asked First Copper Ore From El Salvador To Postpone Meeting Th SANTIAGO, . Chile (UPD The El Salvador mine, where the AnaCommunist-dominate- d Waterside conda Company ' of the United Workers Federation asked evan States is spending 103 million dol- gelist Billy Graham today to pos",: lars for development, produced Ui pone the crusade meeting sched- first load of copper ore Wednesuled for the Sydney, showground day. ; The mine) estimated locontain May 3, the day on which unionists tons of ore, is hold the May Day parade here up to 70 million ' Union officials said many mem- scheduled for full production a bers might like to attend the cru- November. Anaconda is developsade meeting and some crusada ing the mine through its subsidl members might like to ' march. ary, Andes Copper Mining Co. ' SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) " '!';.' r Relieved of His Command Air Force Off icer PunishedBumped'T'Enlisted Men (UPD The; U. S. Air Force , announced today it has reprimanded Lt. Col. Charles H. Piatt Jr. and relieved him of his command for his part in bumping seven enlisted men eri route to the United States on emergency TOKYO leave. Piatt, - 49, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was relieved of his post as commander of the Air. Te.rxnina 1 Squadron at Tachikawa Air Base and made to forfeit one - half, month's salary, $340. Th Air Force said Piatt was being transferred. The enlisted men said Piatt ordered them bumped from the plane so he and his wife and their four children could leave for a Hawaiian vacation. They said they pleaded with him but that he turned away and ordered a major to put them off the aircraft. "The evidence does not support the allegations that Lt. Col. Piatt took any action to 'bump' emergency leave passengers," the Air Force said. But it added, "He J contributed to the confusion which caused the administrative error and led to the impression that he had caused the 'bumping of emergency leave passengers." The incident took place last March 26 at the Tachikawa Base, a major passenger terminal. Five of the enlisted men were put back aboard the plane by Lt. Gen. Robert W. Burns, top U.. S. commander in Japan, who ordered the craft to return after it was 30 minutes out on a flight to Honolulu with the colonel and his , family. Two other men had left the airport. Five of the enlisted men were rushing home because of deaths or critical illnesses in their families. They were identified as Airman Coye Y. Bell, 27, of RobTenn.; Airman ert J. Kindl of Saratoga' Springs, Gordon N. N. Y.; Airman . Read of Ithaca, N. Y.; John P. Snyder of Vandergriftt Paul S. Caia of Pa., and Sedalia, Mo. 1-- Fay-ettevil- C 2-- C 3-- C S-S- S-S- gt le, |