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Show r r o D9 I (c (2 J 0 U ' U..&.,Fance Decide Continue talks Partly Cloudy through Tuesday.! Scattered aft ernoon and night time showers. High both days 90 to 94. Low tonight 62. . Minimum humidity near 20 per cent. Sunday's high temperature in Provo was 94 By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International GENEVA (UPI) - Britain sent Fore i cm Secretary Selwyn Lloyd back to the Big; Four Conference today with ar urgent plea and a suggested formula to give the East- West talks a second chance at finding agreement for a Summit Conference. Under direct urging from Prime Minister Harold degrees. , EIGHTY-SIXT- PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1959 YEAR, NO. 224 H PRICE FIVE CENTS - 4 T 1 r 3 on a Drastic NEW INQUIRY OPENS IN CAB AGENCY! OPERATION c UiS D an aero us i: Loss of the Cold War Washington (UPir sub-commite- e's I Presi- dent Eisenhower's foreign aid program already trimmed i in com mittee faced attempts to', further slash it on the House floor today. 0 Debate opened on the measure approved by the House Foreign Affairs Commit tee. The committee cut the Presi dent's initial request by $266,800 $3,642,-600,00- j Committee Chairman Thomas E. Morgan said in !a pre pared speech that drastic cuts in the program would lead to loss of the cold war. But amendments to make big reductions in foreign aid spending during fiscal 1960 " were expected. :T 'i 'Foreign aid also was the! topic of the day in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The committee-was reported ready to vote substantial cuts in the President's j $3,909,600,000 program, Other congressional news: Pensions: The House appeared set to approve promptly a veter ans" pension reform bill called up under a procedure barring amendments and limiting debate. The bill would cost an extra 303 mil lion dollars! in the first year, but its sponsors claim it would save 12 billion dollars1 by the turn "of -f the century, Strauss: The Senate entered the second full week of debate on the nomination of Lewis L. Strauss as commerce secretary. Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.) was reported hoping to obtain unanimous senate: agreemen for a limitation on debate so a final vote could be reached later! this (D-Pa- .) . , -- i : i ' House influence investi- WASHINGTON (UPI) Goldfine gators who aired the Sherman Adams-Bernar- d case opened a new inquiry today into the operations; of the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB. Eierht days of hearings were scheduled in the resump- tion, of the House legislative oversight scrutiny of the ethics and efficiency of government reg j agencies. ulatory II In addition to CAB officials, the House Group was expected to call attorneys and officials of the airline in dustry which lis regulated by the government agency. i Seen Possibility In Case of Drastic Cuts - ' week. j I - Interest: The House Ways Foreign Aid, Labor Reform Presi- (UPI) is Eisenhower dent considering go- to the. people in p. per ing directly sonal campaign to get action by Congress on some ; ;of his major legislative proposals.: This was revealed today byr Re publican National chairman Thruston1 B. Morton aftd' a White House conference with he Presi- dent Morton, a Republican senator n from Kentucky, said he also lieves the! President will play aggressive; role in the I960 presi dential campaign to the limit that WASHINGTON j j be-a- his duties as chief execu ive will Body Not Yet Found Skin Diver Devoured By Killer Shark i f mid-seetion- ." f . permit. Morton volunteered a 'ter! his his talk with Eisenhower that the President is thinking of going di rectly to the people, making one or two major speeches outside of Washington, on behalf of his leg islative program, We mav be in trouble o the Mutual Security (foreign bid bill or the House may! get stuck labor bill," Morton said. He may hav to exert some pre ;sure in these areas." !':'!. J The chairman said the Presi dent was not considering an extensive series of speeches this year, but possibly one major speecn on each subject. He said they would be made in some city such as Detroit or, "somewhere in Pennsylvania." Morton said he does nqt expect the GOP to win control of Con gress in 1U6U. But he said it a president! and should perhaps take over the house "by a thin margin." j on-th- e j . re-ele- ct Five From One Family Six killed - Of-th- !i i 1 : 7 In ! j, , ry?&x,i3X;&f, t'i y. , " st S V mm ?Jf t it 31 ' . . tmou "dis-couraged- nt lllLlciJ Ban Talks Move Ahead " . j ! i j . - st - " ehson Speaks At MIA u he Conference Session Abandon Head-O- n MOJAVE, Calif. (UPD-lsi- x per son$, five of them from one fa- miiy, were Sunday night when two Cars crashed head. on oa a straight stretch of U.S. highway 6 about 30 miles jibrth olf here! California Highway Patrol offi- cer said the car wer; almost welded together and that acetylene torches were used to free the victims who included om; injured d passenger, a boy. The dead were identified as Processo B. Subala, 49. of the China Lake Naval Test Center, Calif.; Thornton W.- Howard, 23, of Edwards, Howard's Calif.; wifej Millie, 26, and their three children, : Susan, 8, Cindj', 5, and Timothy, 6 .months. How- The lone survivor, Lonnie . . ... arajiwas reponeaim critical con dition at the Navy hospital - at China Lake. seven-year-ol- j. J - ; ; 1 ;.;: i't ! 98 Crewmen Burning Ship i - '. ; ..-- -- ; i 1 ' n' - -- II Ber-lihej- -s . . between Six Killed In -- Crossing Crash Gen-sme- r, t, j ? j . - ! -- ( net-bUi- ty t, i Florida Jury Convicts 4 Whife Youths all-mal- e, : : i ; ware-freezin- g v & . ' - j Ike May Go to the People To Get Congress Action 1 -' French Labor Unions Avoid Showdown j . Means Committee met to consider By JOHN D. KENDAL1 President Eisenhower's request LA JOLLA. Calif. (UPI) A 20 for legislation authorizing an in-- ( foot long killer shark dragged an Continued on Page Four) experienced skin diver under wa ter, and killed him Sunday Off a crowded beach. The victim's wife and best Rape of Negro Co-e- d friend witnessed the s Ivift attack on Robert L. Pamperin,' 33, of nearby Pacific Beach. Pamperin, the father of two children and an aircraft engineer, was diving off the beach at! the popular La Jolla Cove at the time. The cove was crowded with sun bathers and swimmers, "We were jdiving off the cove," said the friend, Gerald Lehrer, 30, "I guess we were about (120 feet when Bob yelled, 'help me.' out' By JACK y. FOX swam over. I adjusted my "I United Press International mask so I could see under water TALLAHASSEE,) Fla. (UPI) And I saw an enormous shark Negroes and whites alike gener holding Eob in the ally hailed today the conviction: of Lehrer continued: four white youth for the rape of ( Bloody Water a Negrc coed as a' victory for "There was blood all over. justice in the! South. Pamerpin's wife,! Carolyn wit The opinion re garding the jury's nessed the tragedy from shore recommendation of mercy saving During the search for! his body, the youths from the electric chair she collapsed and was placed un not so unanimous, however. der sedation, r Several prominent! leaders of the The body has not yet been National Assn. for the Advance found. ment of Colored People were criti- "The shark was easily more cal of the move. .; than 20 feet long," tie said. "1 The guilty Verdict was returned wasn't able to 'do anything any all more.. So I swam to shore to warn early: Sunday ,by the MiMh-ywhite jury. the other swimmiers.'f he said Only 42 days elapsed between It was the second such incident ,the! mass attack ,pn the off California beaches! in recent Negro freshman coed and the weeks, The earlier! attack, by a guilty sentence. huge' gray shark in San Francis The jury left the length of the co Bay, resulted in death for a prison sentences up to Judge W. college youth. May Walker. He will not pass sen Lt. John. K. Kowal bf the San tence for at least two weeks. The Diego City lifeguards said a helsentences could range from a few icopter crew spotted two sharks 1! years to life. cruising near; the. scene of the at Of Verdict Voice Approtal tack but no sign of the body. Of 10 white Tallahassee resi dents stopped on the street by this correspondent Sunday, eight ap proved the verdict. Two declined to discuss it, eight, tnree or two of one said they thought the boys should have gotten death. The four, Wi Ion Collinsvforth, . rfU t Da- 261 dairies Dcaiuoiuugu, 20 vid Beagles, !13, and Ollie.Souta-mire- , 16, were v hisked off to the . GALVESTON, Tex. (UPI) Loustate pentitentiary at Raiford, Fla. isiana Gov. Earl K. Long went into court today fighting to be redirectly from ths courthouse, demona from the mental hospital of leased There was no sign to of stration then. The crowd pore he claims his family conspired .'; '. on in. the put him than 100 person waiting The court hearing, on Long's sidewalk took the verdict in silence. Most of tnem were white. petition" for a writ of habeas A number of fegroes grinned corpus, could develop into a bitter family wrangle.! , widely. :.;;.- no MacMillon, the United States and France apparently decided to go along! with the idea of giving Russia one more chance to open the door to a summit meet-ing on Berlin. flew here frorn a direct Lloyd London cabinet meeting to. go into an immediate western policy huddle with Secretary! of State Chris tian Herter, French Foreign Min ister Maurice Couve de Mufviile and West Germany's Foreign Min By GEORGE SIBERA ister Heinrich von Brentano. United Press International They spent just an hour dis- PARIS (UPI) Frenrh lahnr cussing the new- instructions from unions Voided a showdown clash London and a similar fresh policy witn pres;dent Charles do Ganllfl'; directive from France's President Government on his Charles de Gaulle. All indications austerity program today by call- were uiai iue wesiern ministers ing off a threatened general strike woiuu nave ooviei r oreign lviiius-- i set for Tuesday. " ier Anarei, romyKo at a tormai The unions azrreed to withdraw Big Four secretf session' .shortly the strike order following a last- At aueiwaiuj, wuu.(au idii jiiimuie minute conference,' with Public , Pr 'i differences; ironed out. Wnrk Minipr Pnhor nurrm Differences hadj emerged within Actina on behalf of the eov- the western camp on the desira- - ernment, which owns the rail of carrying on a sixth week worE'Buron proposed to open a of the east west foreign ministers new round of wage talks with the laiKS in siaiemaie wiinoui some union. dramatic turnabout by Gromykq. Auimaior unions. Catholic. So- But ;as the western minister cialist and Communist, aereed to went into their crucial strategy the truce offer and issued a stay w"1 huddle; at Couve De Murville's yil- - on the job order. j all indications la this afternoon, More than 360.000 railroad men were that the allies would go along had planned to walk out for eight with Britain for anothef try at hours starting 4 la.m. tomorrow getting Gromyko to modify his g p.m. pdt tonight, despite a stand. government order that they stay Macon their jobs. The stay put order Authoritative sources said salwas issued under emergency leg- Millan had this blueprint for vaging some sort of agreement: islation signed by de Gaulle Sat-- Aw - LI First, decide within the west urday, '. The government decided to draft on absolute rock bottom terms for railroad men into th army the future. on Berlin's agreement fea the scheduled strike would iot Seek! Gromyko's acceptance ?f Produce transport chaos and set these terms, at least as the basis off a general strike movement. for throwing the whole question of relations to a Summit Eastj-We' . . conference; and setting a date for the 1 before foreign the; ( summit ""p ueneva. 3 ministers leave I HSI i I. r Is PARII If Gromyko should still balk, the British idea would be to propose a limited recess of the present talksj fori about a month to give every; second e a c h an c c at thoughts. . i. , t jvjLany delegates naa oeen reiue-tato drag the , conference on any further.) Couve de Murville East - West (GENEVA (UPI) said last Friday he was test nuclear ban negotiations took and f'anxious." Herter a major jump forward today when then was reported to consider fur- Russia agreed with the .United v US' 'Ji."t Wv ther talk here useless unless there State and Britain to convene a 98 MtiN SAVED IN SHIP FIRE Britisn Cable ship Ocean Layer, shown at the was a major move from Gromyko. new scientific conference on high top, radioed an S.O.S. late Sunday that it was afire in the North Atlantic about But second thoughts apparently altitude explisions. ... were The decision to bring scientists 540 miles east of Great Britain. The crew later ;was abandoning ship. Map, below, prevailing today. been here- - on June 22 hurdled had western The together jpowers m spots area where 98 men were plucked from lifeboats m a dramatic' rescue, early reanother of the technical roadreported ready ,to ask for a Monday. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). cess in the deadlocked talks but blocks delaying a test suspension Britain pressed the West to give agreement at the. eight month old the East-Wemeeting another altitude explosions. 'j The Sodecision came at chance after the progress enough making Is World On Trial to warrant, a summit meeting, viets agreed to allow the experts British Foreign Secretary Sel- to make recommendations on the wyn Lloyd received instructions tests. Both the United States and from the British cabinet to make the Soviet Union presented separa final effort to save the confer- ate proposals for such studies last ence! but without vieldins on Ber Monday when the conference re- -, lin'' Lloyd, in an! airport' statement sumed after a four week recess. in London, admitted the talks ' The .experts will report- back to v indefinitely protract- - the nuclear conference within one Ninety-eigh- t LONDON (UPIK( U ", week. Others Who spoke at Sunday's ed." By United press. International men, including nine U.S. telephone An official commiinique, The 1959 conference of the Mu two generaLLsessions were Presi- Time To Reflect ap engineers, abandoned the burning tual Improvement Assn. of the dents Clark and Moyle; Mrs: the three nuclear powproved by will weekend have ''The pro500 cable ship Ocean Layer about Latter-dayj- J Saints Church wound Bertha S. Reeder, general pres- - vided an j opportunity for reflec- ers after their 95th session since miles off the French coast early the talks began here last Oct. 31, up Sunday!) with the reminder that ident of the YWMIA; and Elmaar today and were taken safely the eternal principle? of the Gos- Bakken, national director of re- tion! upon jthe situation by all the said: at Geneva," Lloyd said. aboard a; German freighter. "It is agreed that a technical are not on trial the world lationships of the Boy Scouts of parties pel "Our purposes are still to preThe 4,534-toBritish vessel 'was is:: America. working group should "assess the serve the freedom of West :t laying the west to east section to 'choose their own way of. capabilities and limitations on Secretary of Agriculture Ezra j oj: the first, telephone cable Benson told the delegates, life and the freedom of access "to possible techniquesof for detection North America and the Eu Taft "identification nuclear ex '.'The eternal principles of the outside world which is necs-sar- y and the t mainland. ropean t plosions-aaltitude high (more r that purpose. Gospel are not on trial you and 30 to 50 kilometers, about than American Telephone and Tele- I are on trial the world is on that believe still "I acceptable 31 miles) above the earth graph company officials aboard trial. And; the world is, coming, can be found tj 19 to on arrangements the basis of discussion the vessel included Ogden D. and, at least in a measure, to recogachieve it. Although the talks and conclusion J of the Geneva Con Sum-njaof Suburban mayor nized the values of these 'prinSix per- cannot be definitely protracted, I ' Calif. UPI) HOLT, ' of ference last summer, N.J., and 'Charles Calhoun ciples and standards." sons were killed when a speeding still hope for agreement and will recommend experts and Frank Putallaz, also residents and instru The morning general session west ound Santa Fe streamliner try to play my pari "in' seeking (o mentation fortechniques consideration the New York area. by the Sunday was the first at. which ploughed into the Car in which achieve, it." - f conference them in incorporating out Fire broke early Sunday and the new First Presidency ' presi- they were riding at a country inSecretary! of "State Christian A. the detection , and identification Cjapt. A. McPherson Ross ordered ded. The officers are President tersection in this small town 10 Herter paid a surprise call today ail hands into lifeboats.. on French Foreign Minister Maur- system. The group will meet in David O. McKay, Pres. J. Reu- miles west bf Stockton. Geneva June 22nd and report.back Those identified among, the dead ice Couve de Murville at the jRbss radioed three hours later ben Clark Jr. and Pres. Henry ' June 29th." .... '': that all were safely aboard jthe p., Moyle. were Mrs. Delfina Avita, 45, and Frenchman's Villa today while byOutside the r com German freighter Flavia, en route Joseph T. Bentley, general su- Mrs. Neives Fuentes, 25. One! man waiting the arrival of Lloyd. It munique, the United States and to Hamburt. perintendent of the YMMIA, said was tentatively identified as Jesus was believed they were bracing Russia agreed to allow the experts good companions were the most Arredondo Perez, a Mexican na- for an approach from Lloyd not to to discuss, all information on helpful things for children and tional, a hitchhiker reportedly be too hasty in ending the Geneva altitude tests gathered since high APPOINTMENTS EXPECTED the ;K- the MIA can see to it that they picked up by others in thej! car. talks;. '':. met last experts July. Gov- have good companions. Other bodies, still unidentified Ready To Recess. TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) U. S. Ambassador James J. .. Until included a the of that ernment sources said today that today's developments McKay admonished the youth at Wadswor'h proposed this with the three new ministers will 'be leaders, "Always remember you man in his 20s, and two children, 'allies were! reported ready to re-cess the talks- for four weeks or approval of the British nuclear boy and a named next week to replace the have a .soul to control, a body a team.' cabinet members who resigned and a soul to keep clean1 to take girl. The children were believed more' should Russia refuse to back negotiating Thursday in an "internal" dis- back to your father in heaven at to be those of Mrs. Fuentes. All down on its new ultimatum to the came from Watsonville. (Continued on Page Four) the close of a short life." pute!.;- j , - n HERALD INDEX Central Utah News. Classified. . . . . 3, 4 .10, 11 ...... Comics Editorial.. . ... . . , National, Wor d News. Obituaries ... .1.. .. ..6, Society Sports Stocks , : .... , 8 9 2 4 5 7 4 three-powe- . . mid-mornin- j g 1 - ' Castro Tightens Preparedness j : - ' I 'U "i Supreme Court Decision Helped Shrink the Dollar Gov. Long Fights In Court Fori His Freedom j . ' 3 ;. ; ' . HAVANA 114 ce Spends More j han Roosevelt an d liuman By LYLE CJ WILSON United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Wlnt item, that t've U. S. government bond?; What hit that bond so hard that the U.S. Treasury; cannot easily sell it to U.S. investors at 4 v4 per cent interest?. The first hit was by a charge of buckshot from the U.S. Supreme Court in 1935.-- The court held that hit once-prize- d j ! i ..I ! I Treasury need not redeem government bonds in gold. That opinion tied the real value and real interest on U.S. bonds to the real value of the dollar. Since then the dollar has shrunk in real value until it is worth today less than 50 cents, compared to its purchasing pofrer value of 20 years ago. The aU.S. dollar has been suffering from a misery called inflation which in the ', those 20 years has eaten up hai dent of the United States. They of- the dollar's were: ; previous value, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Dollar Demise The Supreme Court decision oa Truman and Dwight D. Eisengold redemption in itself would hower. Each of these, in turn, not have been so much except for presided over the executive dewhat was beginning to happen partment of the United States just then and what has continued when that department and jtha to take place thereafter. Collab- U.S. Congress were on an inorators in these events, so harm- flationary spending spree. ful to the U. S. dollar were, three FDR and HST were Democratic men, each of whom was a Presi- presidents and they were, by and i - . large, spenders. Each had a mt war to keep the spending tcmpj Ike is a Republican and, hgih his like immediate predecessors, Eisenhower has a war going although his is cold. A basic difference between FDR and HST as a pair and DDE as a lonr has been that Eisenhower entered the White House with a pledge and determination toward economy (Continued on Page Four) , (UPI) Premier Fi- del Castro's government is tightening security and sharpening the combat readiness of the army 'an armed attack or uprising. Authorities said the weekend arrest of 12 men who served in the army under ousted Dictator Ba ista confirmed the existence of an organized, armed Ful-genc- io " campaign aimed at overthrowing the Castro government. It brought to 71 the total number of persons arrested in the past week on charges . of plotting against the government. A quantity bf arms, ammunition and explosives also wai icizcdL |