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Show Herald Telephones For Ads. News, Circulation: Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. FR Orem Office, 741 N. State Partly Cloudy ' to occasionally cloudy through Sunday. A chance of a few isolated showers. High predicted today 70. Windy. 50 ........ AC 05 For Society ........... FR 84 VOL. 36, NO. 48 ly PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1959 1 n A A Brea ro Kidnap Negr ocini iv J a 11 ID ..IIHUIIIIL..... aUMWWIIUIIIIIJIR Accused Negro Rapist Beaten in His Cell, Taken Away OTO Khrushchev Letter Asks .. MOSCOW I I ; - ; - I i s In Coal Strike -- 40-m- an mining strike that has forced Nahighway patrolmen disptached by tional Guarr1 protection of Eastern Gov. J.P. Coleman, combed the coal fields. pine woods and . streams around Kentucky's Hazard Chief R. D," Cisco Police town this usually sleepy college at the the Ashlo mine said fire of 3,000 inhabitants. and in Combs, Ky., plant nearby Parker was to have gone on out of had before fire hand got trial x. Monday on charges he arrived. fighting equipment dragged a young; white woman said the fire was set at the He mine from her stalled car on a highmine when tipple way between here and Lumberton, shifts at 6 a.m. guards changed It spread to the Miss:, last Feb. 24 and raped her and threatened the while her daughter washing plant offices. company looked on. "It looks like they're going to A special venire had lose the whole thing," Cisco said. in circuit been picked Friday court to try the case. The Ashlo firm was the site of Jail Friday's mass . picketing which o Cir- - prompted Gov. A. B. Chandler to Sheriff Moody said I i send the militia into the coal cusseaJ - asKing i fields. discuit Judge Sebe Dale had The tipple roof was blown off uuarasmen 10 guara arKer through his trial but decided "the by dynamite last week and two case seemed pretty quiet" and no more blasts were set off on an access road to the mine Friday extra guards were, necessary. ' s The unguarded when night, but caused no damage. the gang broke in about 12:30 The big National a.m. The jailer was at his home Guard trucks loaded with men in two blocks "away. ', green battle fatigues rumbled into a beef cattle and Hazard and Whitesburg before Poplarville, tung oil center, has only one main dawn this morning. street. The main feature of the A tank battalion from Barbour-vill- e street, as in most small southern under Lt. Col. Clarence C towns, is the courthouse and jail Burch went to Whitesburg in in the heart of town. Letcher County, on the ' Virginia Poplarville was the home of the while a field artillery outlate U.S. Sen. Theodore G. (The border, fit from Richmond moved into Man) Bilbo, an ardent white su- Hazard, and set up 'headquarters premacist who once urged the in a vacant hotel pending arrival U.S. Senate to resettle American of the main body. Negroes in Africa. of None the troopr were to be Vague descriptions- - of the men down the coal and up came from the six other Negro deployed or the tipples unaround was first valleys prisoners The break-iof a til staff meeting commanding reported five minutes after the officers morning. Saturday '. mob left. Chandler described the pickets Break-iThrough Window at 'the Ashlo mine as "so unruly broke The sheriff said the men, so defiant that .1 feared for and Into his office through a window ' of the state police offithe lives and got the keys from a metal cers .who were holding the crowd cabinet. "This is the worst thing that at bay with shotguns." Chandler also was governor 22 has happened in my 10 years of law enforcement," Moody said. years ago when the National "I had not expected any trouble." Guard was called to put down vioThe highway patrol spokesman lence in a Harlan County coal (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on Page Four) , " ld 60-m- an line-narde- he-an- ' auunai r 1 . jail-wa- six-wheel- ed i n n - -- Humphrey Asks 'Bold7 Foreign Aid Program in Utah Address SAT.T liAKR f.TTV (ITPT1 A in promoting peace and the Comnew bold and dramatic munists are making more headplea for a Foreign Aid program,, established way than we." on a longer-terbasis and aime 1 the Humphrey, who called m at promoting world peace, was present program spiritless, said i made here Saturday . Sen. Hubert Humphrey night (D-Min- ' by ' President Eisenhower's Atoms for Peace program has been sold too Humphrey, tabbed as a likely presidential candidate in 1960, called for an overhaul of the Foreign Aid program in a speecii before Utah Democrats attending the party's annual Jefferson-Jackso- n Day dinner. The Minnesota. Democrat told fc"s audience many of the ideas of the Truman. "Point Four" program were disregarded and "We have dissipated much of our lead often as something against munism, rather than for , manity." If h - , i t v. i .:-:'-' ,f...'. , 3 j ' - (R-Cali- underground, under .water and at great altitudes, the letter said. "The Soviet Premier said his gov ernment considers that "the stopping only of nuclear explosions made at heights of up to 50 milometers (30 miles), as suggested MARITIME HISTORY Canadian and U. S. newsmen by the President of the U.S.A and government officials crowd foredeck of Canadian will not solve the problem. The icebreaker D'Iberville at Montreal for places in mariobjective of preventing the 'manutime history as first passengers to transit initial dock " facturing of new and more of Telephuto) Seaway. (Herald-UP- I types of atomic weapons would not be achieved in that x j - Nixon to Fly New, Fast Jet To Moscow ' . -. ' - f.) St.-Lawrenc- e Open rig of St. Lciw fence Seaway Fulfills Dream i which was adopted by a one-vomargin earlier in the McClellan himself voted week. for the Kuchel substitute, Stronger Bill , Sen. John F. Kennedy who the legislation with Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., said changes Written into the bill on the floor "strengthened" it. ' McClellan said: "It is a much better bill today' than the way the Senate took it up, notwithstanding the facfthat it is sill very (D-Ark- .) te (D-Mas- s.), red (D-N.- ' deficien..' similar C.) bill died in the House late last session. The House this year is expected to adopt some type of labor reform bill but extensive ire visions probably will be made. A Senate-passe- d The rence, causing a traffic jam. (UPI) WASHINGTON (UPI) The SenLawrence Seaway officials admitted 27 wrote a compromise ."Bill of ate Lseaway went into operation Satur ships to the new channel Saturday. for union 'members into The day, opening a frontier for world About that many more waited Rights" WASHINGTON (UPI) its labor reform bill Saturday to to their turns pass through. White House withheld immediate trade. measure more palatable the make At 8:30 a.m., the seaway was A dream of putting comment Saturday on Soviet Pro. to and southern Democrats. labor (Continued on Page Four) mier Nikita S. Khrushchev's let-n- Great Lakes cities on international It approved a substitute for the shipping' routes was .fulfilled at ter to President Eisenhowe on of Rights amendment 'sponBill 8:30 a.m., when two Canadian iceclear test bans. s sored by Sen. John L.? McClellai Mrs. Anne Wheaton, associate breakers led the way for a parade (D Ark.) which had been atof gaily decorated freighters that e press secretary, confirmed that had tached to the measure by a been lining Up for two weeks the .letter had been received but margin three days, ago. said there would be no comment to participate in the opening of ,i;ne overwhelming vote, in tavor the route. on it at this time. of the compromise was 77 to 14 j ' 10 nations steamed Ships from Sen. Thomas H Kuchel, (R- Members of Congress, however, waterway, headed up the Calif.), chief authof of the substi described Khrushchev's call for a for Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago, confessed that he and others tute, . ban on all nuclear weapons Milwaukee, Duluth and other in who voted for the McClellaa on Page Four)F land cities with many cargoes that amendment Wednesday have had TOKYO (UPI) Tibetan freedom second formerly .had arrived by rail. thoughts since. He ' said Other ships, which had wintered fighters burned down the Bank of concluded that parts of it in inland ports, moved out of the China in Lhasa in a new clash they were "imperfectly 'drawn and Great Lakes toward the St. Law- - with Communist Chinese troops, to be improved." ought it was reported today. . ' One proviso that was stricken in Travelers New Delhi, reaching would have authoi-- c Tci India, said the. renewed violence the substitute on By (Continued Page Four) in the capital of the mountainous state occurred recently. They Three-Alar- m could not give an exact date,. They said the clash resulted' in PANAMA Panama (UPI) A huge property damage but they (UPI) LINCOLN, Neb., is willing to give alleged revolu- three-alarfire, touched off when had yio word of any casualties. tionary leader Robert E. Arias a shelf of chemicals fell to the Peiping Radio has insisted jthat safe conduct out of Ihe country for out of Communist Chinese troops have control in exchange for hidden rebel arms, floor, .raged hours and the situaton in Lhasa completely three about Saturday it was reported Saturday. y under control, although it has! adthreatened to sweep a United Press International The offer was understood! ,to building housing a! medical supply mitted the revolt still goes on in Fifteen persons, all but two of ' have been transmitted to Arias 1 company. other sections of Tibet. them children,1 died in three fires inside the Brazilian embassy The latest broadcast today quot- in the south today, Douglas Dort. .general manager where he gained asylum with' two of the Donley Medical Supply Co.,' ed a speech by Gen. Fu Chung, Four children, a girl other men, but neither the govern said he heard a sound like falling deputy chief political commissar and a woman who was caring for ment nor Brazilian ambassador; rocks and a1 woman's scream.:-- It of "Red China's Army, to the rub- the children died when a kerosene ber stamp People's National Con- stove exploded and spread flames Jorge Latour would confirm it; ,. was speculated Mrs. Jean 18, an employe, dropped gress in Peiping. Brazilian, officials refused to through a small home near Cala when was We to or forwarn see a or chemical interview and nearby houn, Ga. permit anyone imperialists floor. to the fell balleronce of . husband British container Five children were killed and eign expansionsists Arias, again ina Dame largot Fonteyn. The i5he was hospitalized in serious that Tibet is an inseparable part their mother injured critically in Panamanian government ordered condition with first and second de of China," Fu was quoted as say- a fire that swept their rural home Dame .Margbt .out- of the country gree burns. Glenn Fruide, "another ing. Any scheme rash enougii to near Brinkley, Ark.J and four chilIshe employe, was taken to a doctor's contemplate invasion of Tibet will dren, left alone at home ptnishod Wednesday and later was' linked to the rebel plot. She office with severe chemical burns be crushed by the iron fist of the in their home on the outskirts of united people of our country." is now in London. on his hands.' Wilmer, Ala. MONTREAL: St. u- Vice President Richard M. Nixon's July trip to Moscow will be a dramatic time-savin- g jet flight, it was reported today. He's expected to make the round-tri- p flight to the Soviet capital in one , of the three big jet transports soon to be delivered to the Air Force' for use of President Eisenhower and other top government officials. Thus Nixon will go to Russia in much the same way his Soviet opposite. Deputy Premier Anestas Mikoyan, came to the United Seates last January. Mikoyan flew to his country in a Russian TU104, a Soviet jet transport. Use of the Air Force jet, an intercontinental .version" of the 707, will enable the Nixon party to make the Moscow trip in about 10 hours' flying time, with pT,b-abonly one stop en route. The e plush transport will cruise between 550 and 600 miles per hour and has a ceiling of over 42,000 feet. ;Two of the three Air Force jets, to be used by the Special Missions Division of the Military Air Transport Service, are expected to be delivered and in use before July. Nixon is due in Moscow on July 25 to open the American National Exhibition. His plans, as announced by President Eisenhower, now call for a three or four day visit in Moscow, with no visits elsewhere. 07 " ly four-engin- , " Explosion Rocks Tibetans Burn 130-mil- test-continu- one-vot- Panama Offers Safe Conduct Revolutionary " ' e Lhasa Clash ed ' Lincoln Hit Fire 15 Killed In Three Fires m two-stor- , : . - .' teen-age- d Hali-burto- ri. , - Persistent Reports Denied trade and aid policies the domi . nant theme. President, Eisenhower will deliv- -' er a welcoming speech to the delegates Monday. The yearly provides- - the nation's business community' with a significant sounding board. The delegates are "expected to endorse anew the Chamber's policy favoring continuation of the reciprocal trade5 program but couple , it with 'a warning against "unreasonable or unethical competi tion" from overseas rivals. . The resolution declares that the reciprocal 'trade .agreements with other 'countries ""must not be the cause of serious injury to domes- -' tic producers." Of the foreign aid programs, a resolution asserts they "should provide realistic benefits to the United States as well as to "the, participating countries.'-- ' It adds; that properly administered, the programs "serve as a strong weapon against the Communist bloc's efforts at economic . ' penetration." get-togeth- er - - : ssistance : ' However,, the resolution also notes "gratifying evidence" of Western European recovery and suggests foreign aid spending "may well be reduced as Western Europe is able to assume a greater part of this . . . burden." , j . Greeted in 'Boston Police Check Threats Made Against Fidel ; BOSTON (UPI) . Cuban Premier Fidel Castro arrived in Boston amid wild cheering Satur-- . day as police checked an anonymous warning that two assassins disguised as policemen were waiting to shoot him down. A hour before the arrival of the bearded revolutionary hero by train from New York at 3:35 p.m. EST, the Rev. Gerald L. Buck told police he had received the death warning from a man who identified, h'ruclf as bellhop at the llo--' (Continued on Page Four) that Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev is ill. The sources said he is spending a regular holiday on the Black Sea Coast and is expected to return shortly to Mosone-mon- th . cow. Khrushchev's absence from the Soviet capital has spurred reports in some Western newspapers that he has been ordered to cut down on his eating and drinking and is, in fact, a sick man. (The latest appeared in the London Daily Express and the Frankfurt Abendpost today.) Diplomatic sources were of the opinion that the Soviet Premier would return early next week and be here to receive British Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery. Montgomery is due to arrive April 28 and review the May Day Parade in Red Square. It was understood that early in LMarch Khrushchev told visiting foreign dignitaries he would take his annual vacation during the month of April. He presumably took the vacation earlier than usual because he expects to be busy all summer with travels in Scandinavia and Inquiry Slated; Into Radioactive Fallout - Is Khrushchev III? Russians Say No WASHINGTON Chet Holifield (UPI) (D-Calif- .) Rep. an- he will hdld nounced Saturday-tha- t a public inquiry next month into' the problem of radioactive fallout possibly a summit conference with and its effects on the nation's health. the West. The California congressman, His month at the resorts of Sochi and Yalta is not all vacation. chairman of the. joint House-Senat- e subcommittee on radiation, It is understood that Khrushchev the hearings from May: 5 to lsaid does his daily routine of running party, and state affairs from his May 8 will include testimony on ' this week's decision doubling the Black Sea retreat. He is in constant touch with "maximum permissible" concenMoscow by telephone and tele- tration of radioactive strontium 90 type, receives important visitors, ia human bones and increasing makes official statements and an-se- permissible levels of ood rs correspondence. ; WASHINGTON Th (UPI) U. Si Chamber of Commerce be--: gins its 47th annual convenJ&n Sunday with discussion of "foreign i By HENRY SHAPIRO United Press International HARTFORD, Conn. MOSCOW (UPI) Soviet sources An explosion rocked a today denied persistent reports (UPI) "highly classified" research area at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Saturday. One person was killed. There were no reports of other ) casualties. The blast occurred in a test area outside the concrete Willgoos Laboratory on the bank of the Connecticut River. J Down Bank In Highly Classified Area; One Killed . Chamber v Opens Annual Convention US 60-ye- ar WASHINGTON (UPI) EAST " , A Boe-ing-7- - ators. It replaced a tougher amendment by Sen. John L. McClellan s or part of 24 states. But, as usual, the setting of clocks an hour, ahead is bringing confusion to a few states. In Minnesota, Illinois and Penn- case." sylvania, for instance,- most largKhrushchev's note said atomic er cities will go to fast time, but explosions at heights of more than smaller towns have voted to stay 30 miles "would poison the air with standard time. and the soil by contaminating with radioactive fallout the vege tation which forms part of the food of animals and finds its way into man's organisms..." (R-Ari- z.) sored by Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel was accepted by both labor advocates and southern sen in" the atmosphere, Millions of clocks across the nar tion were turned ahead Saturday night and Americans lost an hour of sleep to daylight saving time. The change-ove- r came at 2 a.m. local time Sunday morning, in all . guaranteeing democratic rights for rank and file members. Adoption of the compromise "bill of rights" by a 77 to 14 margin ended a parliamentary snarl which had forced the Senate to meet on Saturday. The amendment, spon- wrote. "We should " muster strength! of will and show an appreciation f the need to conclude an agreement providing for the stopping of of nuclear weapons all-test- , By ALVIN SPIVAK A UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL - WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate by an over whelming: 90 to 1 vote passed and sent to the House Saturday a labor reform bill which contained a compromise "bill of rights" for rank and file union members. The lone dissenter on the final vote was Sen. Barry M. Goldwater , who has demanded much tougher legislation to deal with labor corruption and racketeering; The measure is aimed at curbing union abuses and j I MILLIONS OF CLOCKS SET AHEAD 1 HOUR Bill of Rights' Compromise Voi ed By 77 .74 Margn i 4 i Hu- "To be effective, our foreign aid program should be established on a longer-terbasis, so that both we and those we seek to help can plan ahead, can rely on a sustained effort and can be spared the annual agonizing reappraisal to which we subject the very existence of foreign aid," he said. . m . Com- ci - 4 (President Eisenhower wrpe that if Moscow was unwilling to go along with "on-sit- e inspection" of possible violations of 'a test ban treaty, it might accept a$ a first step toward a complete ban the cessation of nuclear weapon tests in the atmosphere tof a height of 30 miles.) "We should not flinch befjoe the difficulties attached to agreement on a test ban," Khrushchev GOVERNOR DIRECTS SEARCH Mississippi's Governor J. P. Coleman, above, has ordered the State Highway Patrol to join the search for M. C. Parker, Negro county jail inmate, who was seized by a masked mob. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) Fire Sweeps Mine Tipple i - ""hTmmi It was an answer to a note Eisenhower sent to the Soviet Premier April 13 appealing personally to' Khrushchev to help get the deadlocked, nuclear talks in Geneva back on a working basis. . A Out !i I X j "izzzr," ! Soviet Pre Khrusjichev has j , is 491 in Georgia. Wore White Gloves Members of the mob wore white Kentucky Troops gloves and masks or hoods. Six other Negro prisoners in the courthouse jail said "about nine or 10" men broke into tne jau wnue otn-er- s waited in. the. courtroom. They r arrived in five cars. "The nine or 10 men who did this knew what they were, doing," a highway patrol spokesman said. "They knew where the sherff kept his keys and they knew HAZARD, Ky. Fire (UPI) which cell Parker was in." : n i f i l r of the the buildings huge - anerui .if w. usuorne j.viuuuy aamj swept Vi ?newnrl Dorlror Tirnnlrl ha JVn inH Ashlo Coal Co. Saturday in the dead. A posse, including latest outbreak of violence of a ; u (UPI) Men-shiko- " - The- - Department of Records and Research at Tuskegee Institute, Ala., said Mississippi outranks all other states in the. number of lynchings. It said 537 Junchings have been Reported in Mississippi since 1882,'and the next highest X s m i mier Nikita S. written a personal letter to President Eisenhower calling for a halt of "all tests of nuclear weaponis," Tass News Agency said tonight. Tass said the i message was handed to the U. S. State Department in Washington Friday by Soviet Ambassador Mikhail V " ! , four-year-o- m Calls for Halting All Nuclear Weapon Tests , i' (c 1 By CLIFF SESSIONS United Press International A Poplarville, Miss. (UPI) of mob smoothly - organized masked men broke into the county jail here early today, beat an accused Negro rapist in his cell and dragged him away.1 The victim, M.C. Parker, 23, ap-- ; parently was bumped feet first down the courthouse stairs. A trail of blood was left from Par ker's second floor cell, through the courtroom, to a car. There were bloody handprints along the ' way. The FBI sent a special squad of agents here and said all i.s crime-detectin- g facilities will be used to track down the mob! Atty. Gen. William Rogers said the White House is being kept in the case." P Letter to Eisenhower! Car in n Testing Ban . - PRICE TEN CENTS . |