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Show t Herald Telephones ' For Ads, News, Circulation: v ( Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. Thursday. Chanc of thunder storms and cooler Thurs- through .;. ............. ,;FR Orem Office, 741 N. State ........ .AC 30 ! f i EIGHTY-SIXT- day afternoon. Ilirh today 82 to 85, and Thursday 78 to 80. Low tonight 40. Tuesday's high la Provo area was 81, lowest Wednesday morning was 42. 05 .........Fit For Society 81 YEAR, NO. 216 H extension Voted For War! axes - N(UPI) -- Anbther extension year's pf the wartime tax; rates on corporations and such items as cigarettes, liquor and automobiles was approved toda'y by WASHINGTO Co Mil v i Sees No Justification For Summit Conference ) s By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI) President Eisenhower said today, that the Geneva foreign ministers meeting had not' y0t m his opinion made sufficient progress to warrant 4) noiaingj a summit conierence; The chief executive, in his first news conference in. 200 reporters he was willing three weeks, told more-tha! 1 long-demonstrat- ed ; ability and thorough familiarity with the attorney general's; ; office." ; - dis-pe- of the ' - si n to j . . summer. ; . By TOM NELSON United Press International If WASHINGTON (UPI) J , . Rep. Daniel J. Flood urged the House today to override the; Eisenhower administration and vote million dollars ' 10 ah extra 140 ' strengthen the Army and iMarine (D-Pa- .) :t Corps. , A hot floor fight! loomed over the proposal as the; House; prepared; to wind up , debate ion'j trie $38,848,339,000 defense appropriation bill and begin: voting !' on ' Sen. Wayne CD-Or- e,) Neu-berge- j Anotner controvers" was sure place their . "differences" before develop over an f amendment Oregon voters next year; Morse's by Rep. William EI Minshall rift with Neuberger has5 been to wipe out the 200 million widening over the past two' year3. dollars remaining in the bill for Morse did not detail the differ- procurement of the Air Force ences. missile. . .' Aid:- President Eisenhower's forBoth" Flood and! Minshall failed eign! aid bill won approval of the to get their amendments adopt ed House Foreign Affairs Committee, when the! House Appropriations but it was cut $2&5,800,0O0. Tho Committee approved .the bill. 'Comvote' was 23-- 6 and the $3,642,600,000 mittee leaders as well as adminismeasure is now expected to be tration forces v!were expected to taken up by the House next week. oppose .the proposals on the H ou s e The Indications were that the House Appropriation: d would pass the bill and send it- Co okayed by voice vote a on Page Four) the Senate by nightfall, although lengthy debate on amendments could . delay final action until ' .f Thursday. As written by the Appropriations Committee, the bill carried $399, 861,000. less1 thin President Eisei-Ifowrequestefl. Though the com; mittee made ftnajor changes in some of the President's' proposed programs it did not appear that thev administration would seek to alter the bill in the House. The Flood said he would offer a seWASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Rackets Committee today ries of amendments which would heard the recorded voice of a add enough cash to finance a 0 Chicago hoodlum offering a Army; and a- - Mann? bribe to a deputy sheriff to Corps of 200,000 men. He indicated let jhim. open a brothel and gain he Would attempttb make the in'eorner to corner" control of gam- creases mandatory. .;'. Congress voted extra money bling in Porter County, Ind. The deputy, Harold D,,Rayder; last year to' forestall a cut in ths Valparaiso, Ind., told the commit- Army. from 900,000 to 870,000 men tee she made the recording May 4 by next June 30, but the adminis-tratio' has gone ahead with the See ' additional story on reduction anvwav: the Marine page 15 Corps is being trimmed - to 1.75 (It-Ohi- o) FINALE FOR TRADITIONAL WESTPOINT RITES The cadets of the UiS. Military Academy toss their caps during tradixionaj ceremonies at West Ioint today. The class of '59 Jwill go down' in the record books as .the last to participate in the' colorful tap i r- : - I f.;;. .. - T II' ference this summer. President - , - 4ll j - compro-(Conlinue- . Bribe $50,000 : j Offered to Deputy Sheriff J er ' " ; 90),-000-m- , an $50.-00- j . n . , j I I J 000, men. talking in Van while J tv automobile with Tom Morgano, 'Porter County representative of the Chicago t Crime Syndicate. MorganoJ h61ding a cigarette between his teeth, listened to a playback of the conversation- in the witness chair and then invoked th3 Fifth Amendment to apjquestions about it." I But Rayder testified tjiat Morgano offered to go as high as half a million dollars ' in payoffs to county officials in order to get a gambling and prostitution mono- - t - j poly.' The (UPD is West st studying a new plan which would establish an East-Weappeals commission pver the access route mit conference.) to Berlin And include East and Beforehand, the western ministers spent an hour at U.S. head- sources reoorted todav. ' The I sources isaid the Western pig Three and West Germany are Considering such an offer in the presently deadlocked F orei g n ministration and provide ah extra Ministers' Conference on one uncondition r That Russia dollars 'to strengthen yielding J li i ITT jL if i guarantees western ngnis m rvesi the Army and Marine Corps. Berlin (and. ree western access to Rep. Daniel J. Flood the city. wants to add enough cash to fi- The plan was .still in the study A and Wes went into nance a 900,000-ma- n Army and a stage, as East negotiating; session anothersecret 200,000-ma-n Marine Corps. Tha this afternoonj WASIILXGTON (UPI) The Sea-at- e administration plans to cut the With! the conference now in the today overwhelmingly apArmy to 870,000 men by next Jims put up or Shut up" stage, it was proved a four billion dollar farm 30, and the Marine Corps is being generally agreed there must be bill providing A $50,000 ceiling on some concrete progress here if to individtrimmed to 175,000 men. support benefits ' there is to be a lateij summit con- - price . ual farmers.' The measure was approved by a roll call vote of It now confergoes to a Senate-Hous- e ence committee to iron out ' differences on several items includVANDENBERG AIR FORCE ,' ing the price support limit and United BASE, Calif. (UPI) The spending on the 1960 soil" bank conservation reserve. States today blasted four "moon The House had placed a1 ceiling mice" toward space aboard LITTLE VALLEY, Utah .'(UPI) of $50,000 on individual price supIII in an experiment 4-Thei Southern Pacific iRailroad port loan. The Senate today aimed at the world's first recov-er- y reported tod ay that the $49 mil- okayed a $50,000 ceiling on the of. live animals from a satel lion rock and gravel roadbed total price supports on ail crops across Grea; Salt Lake is expect- for any one farm! operator, lite. ed to be completed in late July. All 10 voting against the bill jThe 2.6 tniles of fill will re- were Republicans. Fifty two Demvoted place the'. single track wooden ocrats and 22 Republicans ' for "it.. the 'j lake. The new trestlej across The bill's total of more than causeway is 35 feet wide and accommodates two tracks.! four billion dollars 'for spending Track laying will begin 'about on farm supports, research, and the middle of this month. The other programs in the fiscal year preseni trestle, built in 1903, will beginning next July 1 is' nearly be maintained for use on a stand 105 million dollars below President Eisenhower's .budget request. PENSACOLA, Fla. (UPI) by basis, Baker, the smaller half of the U.S. space flying monkey team, successfully underwent surgery i Tuesday and wasi pronounced in excellent shape. d The navy announced the , WASHINGTON (UPI) Comp- he called for more action to "fursquirrel monkey underweit troller General Joseph Campbell ther strengthen" controls over a simple operation for removal of told Congress today that his au- - pricing of contracts, as .well as two electrodes without anesthesia. ditors havte unearthecT $30,800,000 subcontracts.! Campbell's report summarized ' Able, Baker's fellow monkey m excessive costs used m the findings of 14 studies by hU of Air Force planes. auditors of contracts and subconing passenger on their historic financial "watchdog"' tracts for planes, which have been Campbell, high ride inside; a Jupiter for Congress,! said that most cases submitted to Congress during the missile last week,; died Monday of ''unreasonably high" prices on past 12 months. It was prepared night during a similar operation contracts and his staff for presentation to a in which anesthesia was adminis- stemmed from faulty ' procedures by House armed services subcommittered. Able died on the operating by the Air Force and its con- tee: 'fe tractors, table at Ft. Knox, Ky. He said that some of the 14 He said the Air Force has acted eases 'showed that estimated cosfs Able was the heavier of the ta improve thsss procedures but used ia fixing price wcra "ex two, weighing csvea pounds. st " . f I i 140-milli- Senate Okehs .. - on A. (D-Pa- ' M Billion .) Farm . 'i f BULLEITIN I i HERALD INDEX !i'r'iH15 Amusements ... - .- - j Central Utah News 5, 6, 7, 10,! 11 , 16, 17 Classified ' I 12 Comics Dis-cove- rer Editorial . . . ... . . . .". .... National, World News .. 2, 15, Obituaries ."--. Society Sports Stocks i .'. 13 18 4 14 8, 9 4 !'. The Glen Canyon, $9,945,000 for NaWASHINGTON (UPI) Committee House Appropriations vajo, N.M., $13 million for Flam- ended total a ap- ing Gorge, $3,185,000 for Paonia, has recmom of for Colo., $730,000 for Smith Fork, $79,819,000 parpropriation Colof $500,000 for Hammond, N. the Colo., units Upper ticipating M., $2 million for Vernal, Utah, orado River Project. The figure represented an in- and $1,554,000 for, Seedskadee, crease of $2 million over Presi- - Wyo. . The balance of the committee's jdent Eisenhower's prgram. recrecommendation covered advance comrrrttee's Includd in the bmmendatiOBS wer f47,367,C00 for planning and transmission lines. Second Space Monkey Okeh !'''. j tions. quarters discussing how. best to follow up British Foreign Secre tary Selwyns Lloyd's appeal to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko . Tuesday to let - "prac tical work" begin. , , Secretary, of State Christian Herter, French Foreign Minister Maurice'' CouVe de Murville and Lloyd were reported in firm agreement, that Russia should take the first step forward if it wants agreement here, since it was Moscow that set off the cur rent Berlin crisis by demanding that the West get out under (threat of a separate Kremlin peace with East treaty Germany. American officials reported they! were making "microscopic" progress toward a Berlin agreement and the. "feeling" among diplo mats here- was. that a crucial stage was being approached. But diplomats said even the fractional bit of progress here was being (Continued on Page Four) i - After Operation il Seven Found Safe In Drifting Boat Oh Mississippi . . j ? ' . I. j : t ' v holds the' post. The question of Strauss' Jewish background was raised by a' reporter ; who asked whether he agreed with certain Republican ; : congressmen that ' might be a factor in' the current difficulty; of the cabinet officer in v inning confirmation. The President replied first that he did riot know that any Republican congressman had made such a' charge. is If made, a serious factor, he added, this indeed would be tragic. , jThe President was questioned from a number of different angles about the steel negotiations. The first inquiry was whether he law might invoke the and seek an cooling off period if a strike begins July 1. (Continued on Page Four) anti-Semitis- m , j ..s. Two MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) men and five children, mis sin? and feared drifting in the Missis sippi iin a small boat ' for five hoursj were found safe, near Mem' phis Tuesday night. BilliUrdak, 28, his two children, Johnny3, and Michele, 6, Army M. Sgt. Virgil Green, 23, of F.. Benning, Ga. and his three children, Billy, 12, David, 10, and Diane, 8, had been sought by nearly 30 boats that scoured the river below Memphis. s anti-Semitis- m i Taft-Hartle- - 80-da- V k'i'-- r' Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi't Liberal Democrats ( conservatives ) campaigned on a platform of clos military ties with the United State and no precognition of the Chines Communist government. The socialists ;tookthe opposite. stand and wanted a four-wa- y pea pact with the U. S. Red Chnia and Russia, There were 127 seats at stake of the 250 in the upper house. Seventy five seats were decided by renagional elections and 52 from ' tionwide balloting. The, latest unofficial count gavi the Liberal Democratic party 41 regional seats and at least 16 seat in national balloting. d The Socialists won 21 regional seats and nine national seats. jThe Green Breeze party won five seats and the Indepen. dents five. 66 had The ruling party seati at stake in the elections and could lose their majority if they dropped more than two. '. y y - i -- labor-backe- -- . . " yage Steel Negotiators Pessimistic NEW, YORK. (UPI) The United Steelworkers Union called aa ' emergency session of its International Executive Board for Thursday to discuss .the deadlocked steel negotiations. Industry and union wage negotiators ended another session today with no progress reported. David J. McDonald, president of the union, 'declined to. give atrf details about Thursday's meeting' but he did not rule out jthe possiy board bility that the might call the key Wage Policy for a Committee io New York ? meeting. strategy The Wage Policy Committee has the power to accept or reject contract proposals and also to determine major union ' ' i policy actions, The subject of inflation has berj a, major, issue in bringing about the deadlock ' which threatens to trigger the sixth major postwar steel strike when the agreement expires at' midnight 33-m- an .; . 171-m- an . j ' . , current June 30. ' ; .) j Tuesday blamed the industry's problems of inflatioi and foreign competition on excessively high prices. Chief industry negotiator R. Conrad Cooper blamed "spiraling" wages. McDonald ' . Aiid itors F siiJ f . fix-pric- es -- 300-mi- le , subcontracts j I Kaysville Bank Looted of $850 $30,800,0 00 Excessive Plane Costs one-poun- ' . . - '...' - m ' -- j ;- for the differences between the armed services on the missile 'program, Eisnhower said he was standing behind the defense plans he submitted to Congress in the late winter, pending completion of new study of the missile program by the secretary of defense. Eisenhower . said no decision had been reached on asking Congress loU permit; an increase in fed the interest rate on long-terobviwas But eral securities. it ous, he added, that 'the government simply, had to do something to! avoid financing too much of the 283 billion dollar public debt with short- term securities. j He said it was true that he was disturbed, over" recent polls showing a decline in the national acceptance of the Republican party. He! said plans to attack the situation! I we re being drawn up and would be announced in the near; futiirej' presumably by the Republican National Committee. Kind Words For Strauss Answering questions about the embattled nomination of Strauss, Eisenhower said he rejected the theory that even if the commerce scretary is confirmed, his usefulness - willji be seriously damaged because of the charges made against him in the Senate. Formal debate on the nomination is expected, to begin . in a day or two, with a close final vote likely! Eisenhower said he found no criticism of jthe manner Unwhicn Strauss had operated the Commerce Department fora the pas: eight months and he saw no rea-s(- n why the same situation would tfbt continue ' as long as Strauss r- -As 74-1- 0. Roadbed Across Great Salt Lake Near Completion I Bill ; Golpradp River Project Voted $2 Million Over Ike Request ) GENEVA senhower told his Washington news conference today that, in his opintalks ion, 22 days of East-Wethus; far had failed to show enough progress to justify holding a sum- j I - United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) The is House by nightfall expected to have voted to spend nearly 39 million dollars for the nation's ' defense in the next fiscal year. The defense appropriation biH would then be sent to the Senate, A hot floor fight loomed first however, over amendments which would override the Eisenhower ad-- Ei- 11 working Iclasses. .in i , , inning throwing Henceforth, the tadet corps will be; equipped witl official service caps, which by changing the cadet ensignia to ;he officer's ensignia'J can be worn in the regular service. (Herald-UP- I jTelephoto). Bo-ma- rc - ii New Wan I o WestWfu B teak Bead Idc It at eneva Hot Fight Waged On Defense Bill j - J moM pro-weste- rn . Lj' 1 The Liberal Democratic p a r t y swept to a clear majority in th upper hoase of the Japapese Parliament i today in tabulation of 3- - ,r nai. returns from j Tuesday' ele L 0 ' '.L't TOKYb (UPI) , Extra Urged For Defense ' Japan Election r J-- - rn Party Wins :. : " j Pro-Weste- t)ther highlights of the presi dent's news, conference: He said any injection of anti- Semitism into the SenateT confir mation battle over Secretary of Commerce Lewis Strauss would be a tragic, sad affair, completely unwarranted by Strauss highest type character and ability. '. Denies Lewis' Charge He labeled as completely untrue a charge by John L. Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers, ; 1 i li mat xie was t'uasicany against iabor in the steel .negotiations. In this connection," Eisenhower,; said his interest in big businessmen was only f slight! compared to his interest in the ultimate fate of the SI'1 Morse not supwill said today he r, port his colleague, Richard L. amendments. will for reelection and Split: progress had not yet produced sufficient evidence to justify planning for top level meeting later in the $140 Million - -- satisfactory- sajid,: the meeting going on now ;:; . define - rather liberally. But evert; so, he (R-Idah- o) j " or change in office," Clyde policy .'. Said. '. a of U. S brother Budge, Hamer Budge Rep. has been with the attorney general's office the past six and one-ha- lf years. The,' two brothers' at, one time had a joint law practice in Boise. Callister succeeds the late Justice George Wortherh on the Supreme; Court. - , 4 i "In this way, there will be no interruption r tilled spirits, l barrel for beer, and varying- amounts for wine. The measure retains the present tax of 10 per, cent on the manufacturer's sale price of autos' and 8' per cent on parts and accessories. These .'had been scheduled to go down to 7 per cent and ' 5 per cent, respectively, ".; ; , Before acting, the committee heard Budget Director Maurice H. Stans testify that the federal deficit for the year ending June 30 is expected to total $12,400,000,000, about 500 million dollars less than estimated in January. This still would be the greatest deficit spending in peacetime hisvr'i tory. ., Other developments: Defense: The House continued debate on the bilappropriating nearly , 39 billion dollars for the nation's defense in the next fiscal year,', with passage expected by nightfall. A hot fight loomed ove amendments which would override the Eisenhower administration "and provide an extra 140 million do' lars to strengthen the Army and .1 Marine Corps. M-- m Du he selected Budge' "on r the basis of his the House Ways And Means 'Com- a gallon for fi Hi r mittee. The Treasury would lose two' billion dollars a! year if the rates were reduced. The bill would! continue until June 30, 1960, the 52 per cent levy on' corporation profits, preventing ah automatic; drop to the permanent 47 per cent rate. Also seir aside are Scheduled tax reductions of one cent a pack for i 7 J Deputy Atty. Gen.' Walter il, Budge ws named today as Utah's ' new attorney general j' He succeeds E. R. Callister who wlil be sworn in Frit- Jr., day as a justice of the Utahr Supreme - Court. Budge's1 appointment also is effective Friday.! In. making the! appointment! Gov. George D. Clyde said ? PRICE FIVE CENTS n Press International By United Reduction of Rates Would Mean Treasury Loss of $2 Billion cigarettes, nn ATTORNEY GENERAL t $1.50 PROVO IUTAH COUNTY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1959 BUDGE NAMED ; PARTLY CLOUDY cessive",, by about 17 million dol- subcontracts by the prime con'; lars, which, unless, adjusted, would tractors.! ' lie saki the subcontract prices boost government costs by $6,340,- are important because the prices 000. In other cases, Campbell said, paid to the contractor by the Atr prices were negotiated without Force usually include them. Contractors involved in tha enough consideration of cost inaVailable. He was which formation study included Boeing Airplane said that in these cases the selling Co. Seattle; Rheem Manufacturprices totaled $58,700,000, aboat ing Co., Downey, Calif.; Friden, $13,800,000 or about 30 per cent Inc., San Leandro, Calif.; Menas-c- o above costs. Manufacturing Co., Burbahk, Campbell said all 14 reports Calif.; Firestone Tire and Rubber dealt with "inadequate use of cost Cp.j Los Angeles; Goodyear date" in negotiating contracts by Arizona Division, Corp., the Air Force, &zd ia determining Utohfield Park, Ark. ' Vir-cra- ft KAYSVILLE CUPD A bur- glary and the loss of $850 was discovered today at the Barnes Banking Cc in Kaysville. Six Federal Bureau of Investigation agents arrived to conduct the investigation.' Davis County Sheriff LeHoi Day said the burglars were believed to be juveniles. They entered the bank by breaking a rear office Window and escaped w ith the money, all In silver dollars, and quarters. The break-i- n was discovered by bank vice president Aka Blood ebout I ft.ro. tods;. half-dolla-rs ' |