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Show Herald Telephones Cloudincs: For Ads, News, Circulation: , f, ' y Provo Office, 190 W. Orsm Office, 4th to a considerable extent Ihroug-Tuesday with, chance of some light showers or thunder showers. Little change in temperatures J High both days near 83, low tonight 58. h FR r 50 '1 N. State 741 AC 5-1- FR For Society 84 , PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1959 YEAR, NO. 16 EIGHTY-SEVENT- H PRICE FIVE CENTS in n aims Get reafmeof iQoalce 1 ?i .1 Gang ...X ''.v- -f- - ..m ..... i j. . - - : II : ,. ?m wmmmmmmmmmm sr- - - 1 5 u(cn o)(o)fr u n . Possible Deadlock Is Hinted V. WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont.. (UPI) At least one of the persons injured in 'Montana's disastrous earthquake has contracted an infection resembling- gas gan- " - grene. United Press International learned Sunday night that special serum for treatment of the infection was rushed from. Billings to Bozeman to be administered to one victim ; : -- ' and possibly his wife. rC"? The confirmed , that the man's attending " physician wound had 'developed "an organ i ".. , ism like gas gangrene," similar toi gangrenous infections contracted by men suffering battle' field wounds. " We think his wife probably suffered a mild case," the doctor Six Escape Iowa State said. The physician said these appar ently were the only surviving vie tims of the huge landslides who suffered the infection, i He said, however, that two men who died in the Bozeman Hospital "could have had it, in addition to their Penitentiary ' FORT An Iowa (UPD patrolman today cap tured one of six convicts who broke out of the Iowa State Pen Jeritiary Sanday8 Another fugitive., the last remaining at large, was believed trapped in a cornfield and woods. said Penitentiary was seized Charles Wallerick, 25, fey the patrolman in Dallas City, across the ".''Mississippi HI., River from here. MADISON, off-dut- y ; - officials, , a giant earthslide that may have entombed hundreds. Mrs. Stowe's husband, Mark, 23, was one of ithe 10 known victims of the earthquake that rocked the entire Pacific' Northwest shortly lington, Iowa. before midnight Jast Monday. Authorities said Elliott took to rhe fields and timber area aftex WEST YELLOWSTONE,Mont. running through police- gunfire at (UPI)--of Utah Morgroup a roadblock. mons has ended a ' futile search Invade Minister's Home - of earthquake - battered Madison The six convicts overpowered Valley for the body of a neighbor four guards and sawed their way missing in , the tragedy. to freedom: One, Wilbur Bihain a The 4 40 friends of Mrs. Marilyn convicted forger, .was seized out Stowe of Sandy, Utah listened side the prison a few minutes'aft-e- r (Continued on Page Four) the escape. . Three others, "Samuel Parres 40, Charles W. Carlyle, 30, and Ronald C. Bessler, 22, invaded a minister's home and held the min ister's' wife and three children hostages at knifepoint for nearlv three hours before they were dis covered and captured. Their presence was uncovered when a neighbor boy. also being held as a hostage.sig jailed inquiring police by facial ' gestures that he was talking un-- ( ,t TOMS RIVER, N.J. (UPI) -- A rusty gave the inmate of a pad Continued on Page Four) ded cell smoking materials as "an act ot kindness"Jhaf inadverten. iy led to a fire which killed eight mmates of the Ocean County jai!, Prosecutor Howard Ewart said Ewart said it was determined that one of two trusties gave eitn-e- r a lighted cigarette or a cigar ette and matches to the prisone ui whose cell the blaze erupted. E wart's office was one of s eve conNEW YORK (UPD Steel a! agencies investigating, Sundays tract negotiations resume this at the lire the' strike with logging jail. The morning 15 blaze the and injured 41st persons. its industry day Gov. Robert B. Meyner and maintaining that the only solution Sheriff. collective Harry Roe also began in bargainlies in "free quiries into the blaze. At the ing." Ume of the fire, the. jail, with a indusR. Conrad Cooper, chief try negotiator, said Sunday the recommended capacity of 23, steel industry stm was against noused 65 prisoners. The inmate of the padded cell, proposals for a public was awaiting transfer to. a state board to look into the. dispute. Both the industry and the Unit- - mental .hospital. Ewart said it could never be ed Steelworkers know the facts television pro oetermined whether the fire was Cooper said on a gram, and "we don't .need any started intentionally or began ao one else to tell us the facts." oidentally, because "nobody ' saw The Steelworkers seek a 15- iiim (the prisoner!" The prosecutor "said "there is cent an hour wage increase and maintains that industry c o u 1 d nothing vicious", in giving" the grant 'one without raising prices. man a smoke. It was "anact of The industry, replying that , any kindness,'.' he said. . Ewart declined to identify thi wage. boqst would be inflationary, is asking certain contract chang- trusty who passed the smoking es. equipment- to the; prisoner, f Gen not ral Peterson, 35, Philadelphia. were talks expectToday's Peterson's cell padded I witn ed to tackle the central issue of wages. Union President David J.r foam rubber, burst into flames and McDonald was not slated to be spewed fire in all directions. Sev ' (Continued on Page Four) present. ; - - A - i " 8 Killed In ew Jersey . JaiPlaze -- - Negotiations In Steel Strike Resumed Today . . ; two-stor- y, -- : fact-findin- - g -. f , . Hospital view as the 61st annual meeting high - will of the AHA , convened in New continue to spiral at about 5 per York. cent a year, the new president of That is why, he said, the the American Hospital Assn said "functioning system, today. v something like the Good HouseTo assure the public that its keeping Seal of Approval, would hospital bill "isn't being padded," help to clear the air." Dr. Russell A. Nelson of BaltiIt would be "one more guaranalso he said a favors "bank more, tee," he said, that people aren't all-tim- e ! bank-examin- examiner" system for hospitals across the nation.' It is understandable that "the public will resist further increases Jn hospital costs," Dr. Nelson, director of Johns Hopkins Hospital, explained during an inter- . , er "being charged twice for something they get' once." "Let's face it," he said, "most hospital bills read like a Chinese treatyand people mistrust them." Returning to the bigger pain in Memorial services marking HOLLYWOOD (UPI) (UPI) -Se- nate-House conferees hit their first snas today iin efforts to work nut a compromise labor reform bill. The controversial,' issue: How to handle labor disputes in areas neither the federal governJames Kirkwood, 83, a star of Valentino's era will where ment nor. the states now assume ' deliver the eulogy at the annual service. The. "Woman, in jurisdiction. . Black" was expected to make her annual appearance and Until today, the .conference committee had reached place red roses on Valentino's crypt. tery. . , p . . nnm.rtftri iWlifMBm in-- "iinn I .i'-- ,'BiBi.W"irMiTii-,- ' i ! in r ij ' f (R-Hawai- i), six-ye- ar Telephoto). TESTS HINT FIRING OF GIANT ATLAS MISSILE VANDENBEfiG AFB, Calif. (UPI) The static firing of an Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile here led observers to speculate today that a full firing of the missile would soon be held at this West Coast ' missile facility. The giant Atlas was put through a static test for the first time here Saturday, The Air Force :said such tests are "known as flight readiness firings." The missile was anchored to the ground while its rocket . engines were checked out. Mitchell Opens Survey On Steel Strike Impact Soloris From measure passed by the House, The "no man's land" issue is ir.U no uii ,s"t. (HIP" nf tlirpo main w iiiv.il ...uAn rn ixia the two bills differ widely. The; other two, concern secondary boy' cotts and organizational picketing.-Al- l three of these sections are amendments to the Law. The Senate volcd to keep these changes at a minimum, but SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) A Salt Lake couple was the House version would killed and their two grandchildren and a Nevada youth more definite restrictions onimpose boyheadon collision cotts and picketing. were critically injured today in "a two-ca- r The conferees reported 'during neat Mt Dell Reservoir in Parleys Canyon. R. Witt Averett, 62, and Elsie Averett were killed in the weekend they had received nu,merous letters urging fthat the the sraashup .on U.S. Highway 40. stronger measures be adopted. .Critical injuries were sustained Senate conferees were known to side oy Lynette Larsen, 12, Sunny Doolittle Soys pefer .the milder bill, and it was Calif., and Spencer Larsen, 9, teared in some quarters the comtheir grandchildren, and David mittee A. Luce, 18, Ely, Ney., driver of might become deadlocked on the issues., the other car. Other congressional news: Luce suffered head injuries, Construction! A Senate sniimmJ fraca cuts and bruises, multiple mittee today approved a 500 tured" jaw and possible othj dollar federal, outlay to help fractures. the state build schools. The head The girl sustained injuries of left the spending bill would spread the aland a fracture leg location over two years and The boy suffered amounts would and of each leg, head injuries depend on 'populalacerations. 'The tion and wealth of the individual LOS ANGELES (UPI) United States has almost caught States. The' same guides' would up with Russia in the race to build determine, what percentage states mtercbntinental ballistic missile3 would pu up in matching funds. hat are ready for use, former The measure noW goes to the Senate Education and Labor CommitAir Force Lt. Gen. James H. tee. f said today. Khrushchev: Senate Democratic Doolittle, who won fame in World War II with his bombing of Leader Lyndon B Johnson urged of Congress not to "flee Tokyo early in the war, now 's members the capital" just because Soviet board chairman of Space Tech. Nikita Premier Khrushchev is in He spoke nology L'aboratoiies. He here. left it "up to ih coming, an opening address before the administrat'on to w hethcr as balfourth annual symposium on United Press International Khrushchev should be invited to listic missile and space technolDoctors sought today to deteraddress Chairman Congress. J. ogy mine the cause of food poisoning out that Rus- William Fulbright of the Senate Doolittle, pointing outbreaks in' three states that leiv sia had an head start Foreign Relations Committee said ) 200 stricken. more than persons m the missile race, did not say Sunday the Soviet leader should Nearly 100 Were either hospital- how close the gap had been be given a chance to address lawized or were given treatment closed. But he added that U. S makers 5f he wishes. House Demfor food poisoning at two separate probably was ahead of Russia in ocratic Leader John W. McCor-mac- k has objected to such an inpicnics held in a North Cheyenne, ?orae Ways "because in all likel'" afternoon. vitation. Wyo. park Sunday hood we have, a more compact Laos: Secretary of St a t e. Chris--tia- n Officials said 25 persons were smaller, . cheaper ICBM." A.- - Herlfr br:'cfcd congresand to Memorial admitted Hospital Another prominent space scion ' to De Paul 29 were taken another tist warned the U. S. public! not sional "foreig 'affairs experts on Hospital. A total of 35 persons c be fooled by proposals for mi1 the situation in Laos, where Com-- ( were treated at the park and. seat Continued on Page Four) Itary adventures on the moon o home other planets. James Young, Meriiorial Hospi"Such proposals appear to ba tal administrator, said none of' i?o "'wr .than f1 pM,..n' those admitted was in serious coa (Continued on Pare Four) j Take Oath , Taft-Hartle- y The (UPI) three members of Congress from the new state of Hawaii were sworn into office today The first official act for the iwo new senators was to participate in a lot: tery. Sen. Hiram L Fong (R), first man of Chinese ancestry ever to sit in the Senate, won a coin toss and a drawing to become the 50th state's "senior" senator with, almost a term. . E. Oren himself a four-yea- . asa ar .' . on 4 Doo-iJltl- e ' The two new senators drew lots for the length of their terms after being sworn in as the Senate's 99th and 100th members. They could ' been six,' four or two years. have By W. B. DICKINSON Jr. port as bolstering their own ar Two historic mahogany ballot United Press International guments in the dispute. held the answer to how long boxes Mitchell's on the stee' report WASHINGTON Labor (UPI) term a awaited each of the new on strike's impact other indus Secretary James P. ' senators. tries showed that railroading and launched a special survey toda! were hardest hit. Long, having e lier lost a coin to determine impact of the Production in toss for seniority, drew, first from the defense and lengthening steel strike on ematomic box which held one blank card a not have energy programs ployment in the construction, minVft been Mitchell and another said affected, signifying a six year ing and metal working industries term ending Jan. 2, 1956. He drew The new. study was another in Saturday, although they have had to dication of stepped-u- p activity by for ask thein Commerce Department the blank. one-ma- n help Mitchell After Fong picked the six-ye- a procuring steel. presidenProducers of freight cars, ma card, Long drew from the other tial fact finder to put; pressure for a prompt settlement oh both chinery and chemicals have re- box which held cards for a "four-year- " term ending Jan. 2, 1963, industry officials and the striking ported their operations may sufterm ending fer if the strike continues; unW and' a "two-year- " United Steelworkers. Steel negotiations, were sched- the middle of next month. Som? Jan. 2, 1961. He got the four-yeuled to resume today in New impact already has been felt in card. York City after being recessed construction, trucking and orj Long and Fong were sworn in over the week end. shipping; by Vice President Richard M. About Mitchell disclosed only Satur125,000 workers in Indus Nixon, 20 minutes after Speaker day night that about 625,000 wonc tries other than steel have been Sam Rayburn swore in Democrat ers were either .on strike or ouf faid .off as a result of the strike, Daniel K. nouye as Hawaii's first dition. elected House member. of work because of the according to Mitchell. The same caterer furnished po ! walkout. He also revealed Spectators in the crowded Sen- tato salad to both picnics, accordate galleries that payroll losses of .these idled including the ing to Health. Director Dr. Jame of the senators-elec- t workers were running about 70 He listed the salad as rose during the ceremony and Sampson. million dollars a week. the probable cause of the poison took part in sustained' applause These facts were a supplement :ng. afterward o the exhaustive report Mitchell Four, restaurant employes at the released last Thursday concern-m- g s Wisconsin State Fair at West and production rates, profits were suspended Sunday ,afte-2wages in the steel industry gen persons were hospitalized from et ally. ' . food poisoning. WASHINGTON reBoth sides viewed the first Presi(UPI) Health Inspector Ronald Weber dent Eisenhower, . back from a aidthat apparently all those k "work and play" vacai (Continued on Page Four) tion at his farm, made prepara tions today for his coming diploBy United Press International to The matic mission Utah Foundation reports Western Eu'; the individual income rope. Eisenhower departs Wednesday reached a record "total of $1,516,-000,0in 1958 despite the recestor the trip to Bonn, London and Paris. He will coordinate Allied sion. the pocketbook in months and strategy before Soviet Premier This amounted to $1,753 on a Dr. ahead Nelson said that to years .ikita Khrushchev's visit ths per capita basis an increase of three forces are bound to boost United States starting Sept. 15. $13 over 1957. The national averThs MIAMI BEACH (UPI) ' White House Press Secretary age income increased . $14 : per hospital costs. giant American, Bar Assn. opened , They are: Bigger salaries for James C. Hagerty told reporters' capita. conventior. here today a five-da- y nonV- -: professional workers, inflaSunday the. President would like withs U.S. Supreme Court justices " tion, and advances in medical to hold a news conference . before rubbing shoulders with country science. for leaving Europe. lawyers in .a spirit of .comradeThe latter, hq said, will , mean The President and Mrs. Eisen- President to Hold ship. mote intense and costlier care. hower returned from Gettysburg The 11,000 delegates to the 82nd Inflation, he stated, can't be Pa... Sunday .afternoon by auto- Press Conference convention of the ABA will hear dodged in a hospital any more mobile. The skies were overcast over '250 speeches and work sesthan . it can in any other field. during the WASHINGTON (UPI) drive, which Presi- sions, including policy debates on And with or without unioniza- was made in less than, two hours. dent Eisenhower will hold a news space flight, nuclear radiation, tion, he said, there is a trend to Before leaving, the President at conference Tuesday .at 8:30 a.m and overseas travel. boost salaries of tended Gettysburg Presbyteriai p d.t.. the White House announced No less than 15 major proworkers in hospital: church services. today. grams were icheduled toay. Top ; ; mil--li- 200 Persons r (erm. Mitche't Catching Russia In Missile Race 'fractures ar " ; U. S. . Sen. ." V WASHINGTON His colleague, Long (D), drew in Lan-drum-Grif- fin , Hawaii six-ye- Ken-kedy-Irv- , Husband, Wife Killed In Parleys Canyon Crash -- (Herald-UP- I ences between the Senate's bill and the stiffer Three Critically- Injured vHHiMUttHBa LOTTERY THAT WAS 'LEGAL' Sen. Hiram L. Fong, first man of Chinese ancestry ever to sit in the Senate, won a toss of a coin today and thus became the "senior" senator from the nation's 50th state, then in a drawing from one of two historic mahogany ballot boxes drew the card giving him an almost term. term. His colleague, Sen. Oren Long, right, drew a four-yea- r - Hit By Food Poisoning . " : eight-year- , , 1 , ; - Note Accents ; six-week-o- ld fa-mali- es Ike Prepares For His Mission to Western Europe Hospital Costs Will Continue To Spiral At 5 Per Year, Says Association 'Chief YORK (UPI) WASHINGTON the 33rd anniversary of film star Rudolph Valentino's death will be held today at his crypt in Hollywood Ceme- two-wee- costs at an v -. objective. quake-battere- d futile. The 40 friends of Mrs. Marilyn Stowe,.-Sandy- , Utah, listened with bowed heads as John C. Rich ards, a Morman bishop, conducted a .simple religious service near ' 82-fo- ot other injuries." A group of Utah Mormons gatb Maered Sunday in dison Valley to pray for a neigh bor missing in the tragedy. Thei; search to recover her body was Prison authorities reported that the remaining fugitive, Arlee H Elliott, 25; .was" believed surround ed in a rugged area south of Bur- . CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) An early model Atlas missile roared 5,000 miles into the South Atlantic today in the fourth straight successful test since a series Solons Disa of failures upset the July 1 timetable for operational g ree On capability of the missila. The Air Force said 35 minutes after the intercontin- -' lV IYIUII 3 UU1IU. ental ballistic missile blasted off that preliminary data Issue of Measure Atlas "appeared to achieve its test indicated the . 5 Captured n; Al-li- 0 Utah's Income Hits New Record - state's 00 Red Position On Germany HERALD INDEX Central Utah News . 3, 4, 10, 12 Classified Comics 10, Editorial National, World News. Obituaries Society Sports Stocks . ; 11 8 9 2 4 5 '' 6, 4 4 , 11,000 Lawyers Gather For Convention In Miami Beach " , , " v 85-mi- non-professio- le , Soviet Premier PARIS (UPI) Nikita Khrushchev has sent no,tes: to the western allies expressing determination on ' the Russian Berlin situation- - as a prelude to his ialks with President Eisenhow' er, diplomatic sources said today. The .latest note to West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was delivered Sunday in Bonn. DiploKhrushchev matic reporis sent to Veen letters also had France and Britain, and British Press reports said there hadbeen a note to Washington as well. sources said The diplomatic contents of the know not did they but notes Khrushchev that all the apparently was summing up the Russian 'lnyielding demands including a free city status for Berlin and and end of western military occupation. Some quarters here believed Khrushchev's main idea was to show that the Soviet official attitude had not softened one whit on basic issues like Berlin's status, were a speech by outgoing L. Malone of Ros-wel- l, Ross President N.M , a panel discussion on "the pros and cons of capital punishment" with Ohio Gov. Michael V. Di Salle participating, and election of officers for the- coming year. Adm. Felix B. Stump, (ret.) vice chairman and chief executive officer of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, presented the. foundation's George Washington Honor Medal to the German events I - (Continued on Pare Four) reunification and European security. ' ' ,1 : - . |