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Show n .!.'!' .It 't , ' l" n D:'.;' 0 n LdiOTS An ran ry 13 toMi ft " i. Fair through Wednesday. Cooler today. Warmer Wednesday. High .today 75 to 78. Low tonight 46 to 50. High Wednesday 80 to 85. Erai ii i, ! . - iiisnese u.roops assiiig Along nclia YEAR, NO. 22 EIGHTY-SEVENT- H r ' PROVO, UTAH COUNTY UTAH 'y.;By B. K. TIWARI NEW DELHI, India (UPI)- - Defense Minister V. K. Khrishna Menon and the heads of India's army navy and ' t ; air force resigned today. The internal dissension in the nationls armed forces erupted as fresh reports came in that Communist Chinese troops were massing along India's northern! frontiers. The ' resignations caused grave concern throughout the country, and threw the government and Parliament PRICE FIVE CENTS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1959 -!- Jr-uiY- f ! ! , "Z3 (SUM igjG3 da DTTD IM. !7l) Y , " - . . V : : 'Y. '.. Y- .. ". ...Y Y vY Labor Bill Conferees U0(g 17. Deadlocked j o (30 u s c ' i 1 ' 9' ' ' s r te j ; - , J S - . c d! , , - y 14-m- an dent's conrhlg talks in the United States with Russia'-- Premier Khrushchev ultimately may lead to a summit, meeting. The President interrupted his cold war peace mission for a day to devote himself to an accumuli-t:o- n "of White House business. He spent most of the day 'working at Ms desk at Winfield ' House, . of fi cial residence of U. S. Ambassador John Hay Whitney. Ni-ki- ta WASHINGTON - PresiSoviet Pre- IUPI) dent Eisenhower and mier YNikita Khrushchev will-- go 'into seclusion' at Camp Davis for two days! of fateful cold war talks t the end of the Russian leader", ' " - . . U.S. tour. . This was disclosed 1 f v 1 fi -I f'i i r by today Eidiplomatic' sources who said senhower plans "ftto take ' Khrui hchev to the isolated and tightly guarded presidential retreat . in M aryland's Catoctin Mountains 6a Sept. 25. Eisenhower will remain there with him until about midday Sept. 27. There, behind a tight security ring of U.S, Marines, Secret Serv-ic- e officers and State! Department police, the leaders of. the world's two most powerful nations will try to find grounds for easing . the tensions gripping' the 'divided , However, in the afternoon he was host to India's high commissioner in London, Mr. Vijaya Lak-ghPandit, sister of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and a number of other guests at: tea. He also spent some time knocking a golf ball around- - the grounds of Winfield House. Later, he was giving a stag dinner party for World War II comn rades in armsjstcluding Sir Churchill and Field Marshal spa-clou- s Wicr-sto- nt i . mi XA f cat" mWP - .(Herald-Upl.Badioteleplfot- o). Three Former MBCOfficers Face Charges f- - ; - , j r . ; Bandits Steal Polio Vaccine In Montreal ' n ng i - , j House Approves Transfer of Land On Provo. Project 24-hou- r- . j HERALD I INDEX - ...... 7i7-acr- L - L , can World Airways. The , union e said it would walk out if the began .training "third pilots" for jet planes. Pan American, a' union spokes man said, had agreed: not to be gin the training program until tonight to- enable negotiators to try end work out an agreement. Another transportation strike this one in the railway industry, was threatened for November ay he Railway Labor Executive?' air-In- so-call- ed I - Assn. The Seek Wage Increase association, comprised of 11 railway unions demanded an end to a Jthreeyea." wage freeze and said it would seek a hourly wage increase plus improved, fringe beneng non-operati- 25-ce- nt fits. In the A- - 'i' national steel strike, negotiations were in recess drawn-ou- t Prev-?en- t until Wednesday. AFL-CI- O on called a'i George Meany i nions to make Labor Dayt next , Monday An a "support ' day." y- the steel-worke- ' as strategic bombers are. That means each rocket will be kept upright on its launching, pad with its guidance system always set tc direct the missile and its hy drogen warhead to its. Soviet target more than 6,300 miles away. There was considerable mystery about the Defense Department's delay in declaring the first Atlas unit part of the nation's war ar senaSuch an . announcement seemingly would increase U. S. prestige and give ;more cold war bargaining power. . Diplomacy Causes Problems Some quarters apparently were apprehensive about announcing. the missiles military "readiness and h first . Van-denbe- rg . - . ; going ahead with a training shot July 1 'deadline for making the during the current period of weapon operational. East-We- diplomatic negotiations. They seemed worried about the international repercuspossible sions of making the announcement and the training launch during President Eisenhower's talks with western leaders in Europe, billed as nonmissile rattling conferences, or during Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's visit - to the United States later this month. After five explosive failures in a row at Cape. Canaveral', Fla.," in the 'spring, Atlas tests were suspended Defense Secretary Neil H. said then there would be McElroy ' a delay beyond the st . : two-mont- h rs ; agreementlate Monday ap peared to ahve headed off : scheduled strike rin the meat pack' ing industry. , Armour & Co. reached a settlement' with the United Packinghouse and Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union scant hours before 14,000' in 27 plants across the country woufd have gone4 on v strike. The agreement was expected to (Continued on Page Four) " oon-trac- t ; . . Uiahn to Head Sixth Army SAN At-las-- D -- .1 -- " . - . one-tim- -- (D-Wis- .) Khrushchev, Talk On Sept. 27 Televised To, A one-ho- Nixon Hints Ike Will Warn Reds On Asian Trouble SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -P- resident Eisenhower's pending exchange of visits with Soviet Khrushchev has done little to curb Communist aggressioi in Asi'a,: according to Vice President Richard M. Nixon. The Vice President stopped here briefly Monday night to attend dinner meeting an of the Associated Press News Executives Council. Nixon, who recently visited the Soviet Union, told a press conference Monday that the exchange will give Eisenhower a chance to "mince no words" in Khrushchev that the U. S. knows the Soviets are supporting Red Chinese aggression in Laos and India. The vice president said Khrushchev s interpretation of means coexistence peaceful pro tection for his world, but "a hunting license in the world." Ni-ki- ta A FRANCISCO (UPI) Gen. .When tests 'were resumed at Salt Lake City native, Lt. over Cape Canaveral, four shots in suc- Jlobert M. Cannon, will take Arm? U.S. Sixth of the command cession of the combat version came within a mile of their today in a ceremony at the Pit, sidio here. target, an authority said. The new commanding officer is Abour Ready "For Test the highest ranking soldier from If the :our successful test shots Utah. He will headtroops in Calhad come earlier in the summer, ifornia, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, the squadron at Vandenberg would Idaho, Washington, Oregon and have followed t3jp quickly with its Montana. Gen. Cannon, 53, holds the Distraining "launch, over-- the Pacific missile ransc But the delay pushed tinguished Service Medal and the5 the time' for , the training shot into Air Medal. His last assignment the period of the Eisenhower trip was as commander In chief of io Europe and the Khrushchev vii-i- t the U. S. Army in the Pacific with headquarters in Hawaii. here. .. Y protest nt - Atlas ICBM Reparte d 'Corn Wai 1 " I O United Press International WASHINGTON (UPir The United States is preparing to declare its first intercontinetnal bal-- listic missile unit "combat ready." After a delay to fix mechanical troubles, the Atlas ICBM squadron is being turned over to the Strategic Air Command at Air Force Base, Calif. The unit has five missiles three mounted on launching pads and two spares. Later squadrons m will have id missiles. of the three missiles kept Each at the ready at Vandehberg will be assigned a Russian target just . , g ineef Wa ko uf Ha Qape Gdnqverat Projects En m-oth- er By CHARLES CORDDRY - ! -- " Th-;- ! mbd-iOcationllou- se . . z.) ...j' negotiations are snag- it- : ... the refusal of Senate An Indian Foreign Office ged by Democrats to accept without also denied the. invaspokesman : secorrv sion "provisions reports anr1 described them ondary boycotts, organizational as "falsV and incorrect.' picketing and "no man's land" Serious Internal Crisis labor disputes. There was no denying the seriOther congressional news: ousness of the internal military Highways: The House Public rift. The nation's three chiefs of Works Committee considered a state Lt. Gen. Ksthtimayya, one penny increase in the federal Vice Adm. R.D' Katari and Air gasoline tax to replenish nearly Marshal S. Mukherjee handed in exhausted interstate superhighway their resignations; in construction funds. The one-ceagainst ' Khrishna Menon's han' hike, which would be in effect for dling of military affairs. 2i months, would be coupled with They said promotions were giva delayed diversion of some auto en ' without consulting them, a excise taxes from the, treasury to move which; demoralized many "othe highway building fund. fficers and men, Contracts r A House armed servThey also said they were not ice subcommittee questioned satisfied with the treatment given Adm. William M. Fechteler (ret.), them by Khrishna Menon. confronted World War II hero and former The resignations chief of naval operations, prob- Nehru with one of the biggest ably the last .witness in its 16ng problems- he has faced since investigation of alleged pressure India's independence. The main factor is whether he by retired military officers to win defense should for the orders accept the tesignations of weapons now serve. all four, retain Khrishna Menon companies they C hi c a g o Water: Opponents and let the service chiefs go, or claimed they were close to killing permit Khrishna Menon to quit ai controversial bill to let Chicago "and keep the chiefs of staff. e The defense minister, drain more water ! from Lake ' NaMichigan for . its sewage system.. Indian delegate to the United tions in New York, has been unSen. William Proxmire a leading fee, aid two close votes der increasing criticism from pre (Continued on Page Four) Monday showed the opponents were gaining strength. Chinese Communists: Sen. Clifford P. Case (R-J.) said it was. a hopeful sign that Far, East nations "are. now beginning to . realize the true nature of the1 Red Chinese regime." He told ..the Be Senate ' in a prepared i speech, NEW YORK (UPD Soviet Pre-ie- i "the first essentia1 in building resistance to Communist aggresNikita S. Khrushchev, will to sion is for countries recognize deliver a speech over that threr.t.". the NBC television and radio networks during his visit to this Y:. country this month. v 'I Khrushchev's talk will be broadcast live from ,G to. 7 p.me.d.t. Sunday, Sept.' 27, the National. NaanCo. tional Broadcasting tures. i . th (R-Ari- IKE, MACMILLAN.ON TV- President Eisenhower, left, , talks to British Primed Minister Harold Macmillan during their TV appeaiance at 10 Downing Street, Monday. Eisenhower told Macmillan during their unprecedented joint televised fireside chat. .that present meetings with other Western statesmen show their conviction that peaceis imperative.. ..i . ; . j - ; i 1 mi . - UNDER FIRE .Indian Defense Minister ;V. K. Khrishna Menon, reported today to have resigned, along with heads of. army, navy ind air force. He , had been under fire in parliament and press for allegedly playing politics with the armed forces. Ooe group had accused htm of; being P I Tele (Ilerald-i "pro-Communist- ."! U photo). anti-racketeerin- g, , part-streng- if -- mi . two-mont- i - Viscount Montgomery. t Strike Roundup The President flies, to Paris Prev-deWednesday to confer with Charles de Gaulle. The President and Macmillan wound up their talks here in what was described as broad agreement on a "firm but flexible" line to be adopted by Eisenhower when he meets with Khrushchev Sept. 15. But the two leaders, in a, historic WASHINGTON (UPI)-- A federUnited Press International televised fireside chat , Monday A al 1 walkout by operating enstillGrand are accused Jury today ' night, indicated, that they . globe. three former officials of Mutua1 gineers tied up construction pro The Camp David sessions wiU aot fully in step onsummit-policytoat the Cape Canaveral mi.? Eisenhower, it was learned take up almost all of the threa Broadcasting Co. of failing to reg- jects insists that' Khrushchev ister as agents of the Dominican Hie test center today and the days allotted for . Khrushchev's day, still ' a flight engineers . threatened withdraw vind-u-p completely nis visit, to Washington juit must . ; AmeriRepublic: strike Pan tonight the to powers The against western, drive threat before he leaves the country. The indictment was returned can World Airways. But threatenceremonial aspects will : be taken out of Berlin; He believes adequat ed strikes in the rubber, glass and be must . the advance preparation .. care of when he arrives for against Alexander Guterma, Hal meat industries were summit a meeting Koach f.rst time in Washington on Sep, made before and Garland L. Cu- averted. packing ' Jr., at probably ib and goes through a. round of can be held r Negotiators planned to meet to-Big Four foreign ministers' lpepper Jr. formal fjnctions on Sept. 16. . ; It named as bat day. in an effort to end a strike . Between his two visits to Wash- conference. : hand. members of Local 673 of th 3 Macmillan, on the other rot as defendants, the Mutual by ington, , Khrushchev, his family AFL-CIon Four) will (Continued Page official vi't Engineers party, nd his Broadcasting System, Inc., Radio Union at Operating Canaveral. They New t York, Los Angeles, - San Cape News Service Corp., and Otti set up picket lines ' at both enFrancisco,, DesMoines ' and Ame"., ' ofDominican trances Vega, government .Monday, it.' Iowa, and Pittsburgh. ' ' 'i; A . construction company spokes-h.aficial. Eisenhower selected Camp Dasaid the i workers were vid as the site forchis Jiard-roc- U The indictment also named as leaddouble time pay for ovar talks with the tough Soviet ' 'foreign principals" Dominic aj time work' in violation of a gov er in order to give him an opporDictator Gen. Rafael Leonid Jo ernment contract: Thousands x jf tunity to assess ' the real intention? lrujillo Molina, playboy Porfirio workers could be involved, he of Khrushchev entirely temoved Rubirosa, and the government of said because other craft unions , Medical MONTREAL (UPI) ' irom the intrusions and pressures j authorities and police officials he Dominican Republic. refused to - cross! the' engineers1 cf protocol and press. theorized today four rnasked banThe indictment charged that packet, lines. 'j dits stole 75,000 Salk polio vaccine Guterma, Roach and Culpepper Arrange Truce 'shots for bootlegging on ", a black obtained $750,000 from Trujillo's A truce was arranged ;: market. in , ' a . strike on or about FebJ 6, P.Ionday government night in ihe 1U59. on the understanding that tnreatened by the Flight " EnA high incidence of polio of Quebec Mutual woiild rdisseminate city and other parts '; gineers jUnion against Pan Ameri- lent credence to the theory tiat Iiticai propaganda" favorable !' to a black, market, was operating, the Dominican Republic. . The police said. WASHINGTON (UPD Removed From Posts 36 y . Authorities have has House reported unanimously passed The 'three defendants were- reand sent to the Senate a bill au- cases, including 29 fatal, since the thorizing the 'secretary of interior outbreak of v te epidemic, seven moved jfrom ' their posts with Mu- Central Utah News.;. 3, 4, 5, 6 e tract if weeks ago. However, the outbreak tual under a reorganization m Classified .I:..,.. 12, 13 lo turn over a .... ..... .'. .. . . ,10 .... to Comics Salt considered is owned land decreasing. , government bankruptcy. Quterma has beej 11 ; received Water Editorial had Police said Lake City Metropolitan they jrdicted three times before in rebootlegged doNews World National! be the vaccine may X 12, 14 cent months on charges of failing District. The tract," originally reports ad7 for as much as $25. a vial, o make required reports with til? Society nated to the United States, is 8, 9 Sports Commisjacent to the Provo River federal which would raise the value of Securities and Exchange ' Uie stolen vaccine to $25,000. reclamation project. sion. .j . a ; Practices Golf Shots By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International Parliament in House-SenaWASHINGTON Wednesday, when he is j expected (UPI) to announce his decision, conferees; resumed last It was reported that a. fresh ditch negotiations on the labor reof wave Red Chinese troops form bill today with its fate hangmule-packebacked up by heavy ing by a thread. was toward weapons advancing - A slight shift in position by either side could break the stalemate northeastern India. Denies Mass Invasion . and , bring final- agreement on a Press reports from Jorhat, in compromise. " the border province of Assam, But there also was 'a chance the the Reds are moving along said conference would blow up again between India and border the and throw the issue to the Senate CommunistTibet floor. conquered ; an "where' has incursion already commitMembers of the . taken place." tee were cautiously optimistic as This reference tne bargaining gotr underway. to the was an apparent where the , Longju area, Leaders of both the Senate and House groups agreed a dispute Reds seized an Indian border post ; v week ago. over picketing at construction a An Indian government spokesprojects was the fbiggest stumb- man, however, denied that the ling block. Red Chinese were beginning a None of the 14, negotiators mass invasion. He said the rewoujd predict that they would ports were "baseless." '..'.;..; .agree on a compromise between But the Reds were reported the Senate bill ready for action, with Indian and House' the version. and, tougher Chinese : forces only a stone's .But they were much more hope- throw apart in some places.. Thus ful than they wer last Friday there have been no major when their talks appeared! to far, incidents, only minor skirmishes. reach a dead .end. In Calcutta, Premier Jigmi Sen: Barry Goldwater Diorji of Bhutan, ont of the tiny said the disagreements were no border states between India and thicker'" than a razor blade. The Tibet, said there had been no inconference has approved most sec- vasion of his country. He said if tions of a Compromise, generally there had been; he would have leaning toward . the House fea been the first person to. know of - Ike, Khrushy To Hide Out For 2 Days .statement a . 5 LONDON (UPI) President Eisenhower refused to bow to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's pressure for an East-We- st summit conference during their cold war. talks here, it was reported on today. The two leaders wound up 'their discussions still without full agreement oh summit policy. But the sources said Eisenhower and Macmillian were hopeful, though not necessarilyconfident, that the Pres- ' At Camp David . I Y'' s into "turmoil, The service chiefs quit because they said Khrishna Menon was playing politics with the armed forces. Khrishna Menon offered in j turn to quit himself. . Prime Minister; "Jawaharlal Nehru has not yet accepted the resignations. But he is due to make Slight Shift From 1 By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter high-authorit- : Willi! Either Side Could ii i 1 Break the Stalemate President Refuses To Bov To British Pressure ;.'; ' n O rd telling non-Commun- is: ur . nounced Monday. Cleared 25 to 6 Penny ,Gas Tax Hike Ap proved By House Unit . WASHINGTON The (UPI) House Public Works Committee approved j an immediate oas penny hike in the federal gasoline tar to keep the! super-highwa- y to-1- on coa-structi- progiam going.' 7 wai 25-Chairman Charles A.' Buckley jtold reporters afterwad he would ask the Rules Committee' to clear the plan Wednesday sjl it can go to the House floor , ; Thursday Speaker! SKAM Rayhurn told reporters, the bill would be callei i.p Thursday if; it gctsJtules Committee clearance. The, proposal, - drafted by' Hie Iouse Ways - a n .1 Means Committee, .provides fo boosting the federal levy on gasoline from three to four cents u - The vot 6. :" , i .)i -- j : 4 " t.nx-writi- gallon for 22 nionths. Foi' a three-yea- r period after he higher tix eXbires, some of the receipts from' automotive excise taxes would be shifted from geu--rrevenue into the highway ' trust fund. j al . I' President Eisenhower, w hJn called for a Vt cent tax hike, has. describe the penny plan as a stfj ju the right direction. It was , estimated that the tax n'ke woiild bHng in an extra on! ;. ollarsl! billion m not he indicated did Buckley formidablb opposition on the j Y; fOOf.' "I would thiik it would run into, more trouble in the Senate," h3 H .! said. .. Before approving the plan, the committee adopted an amendmeat " declaring it t&e "intent and of Congress that the states s i hou'.d be reimbursed . for - tunnels or 'brdiges; they have built as part of the intersta n highway; systpm. Buckley said :here now ar? about four billia dollars worth pf such projects fo. which the states eventually should - v i . pnl-'cy- j higj-t?.ray- be repaid, . ay y j j , Death Toll in Yellowstone Quake to Reach at Least 29 ' WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont. 'We won't have any more on the list unless we get repeated in(UPD Authorities said today the Y J toll of persons killed in an earth- quiries.' The names on the list of per- quake here that rocked the entire sumed dead jfrom the Far West Pacific Northwest two weeks ago j were: j would reach at least 29. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney D. Ballard Sheriff Don Skerritt announced and their son j Nelson, B.C. v at Bozeman today lie had placed u Dr; and Mrs.: Merle Edgerton, Y on the "presumed dead" list the and Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Woods, names of 19 members of seven fa- - all of Coalinsa, Calif. rrnilies whose vacations ended in Mr. and Mrs. Roger Provoit death under a torrent of earth- and their two sons, Soledad, Calif. Mr and Mrs. Robert J. Williams ' quake - caused landslides. The names of 10 other quake victims and three children, Idaho Fails, , I ; " had been listed previously. Tdahn. Mr. 'and Mrs. Bcrnie Yoyntca, backward "We have checked diand forward and every other Billings, Mont. Mrs. Thomas M. Stowe. Ssr.dy, rection and we have evidence they were in the area," Skerritt said. Utah.( I ! , , |