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Show ' f ' ) - - Herald Telephones ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i I'" . ' ' ' ' I ' - " i . . ' -, ' 1 For Ads, News, Circulation: Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. ................... FR ii 50 Orem Office, 741 N. State AC For Society...., 36. NO. VOL. r i i " v nn fill -- v icti vvs :nf lrij!7D(gL ' FLI PRICE TEN CENTS r'n Nato Okehs West Plan For Berlin il1 -- : - UiG;l'u:GnOG'L . - f- - ; 7- -- ' DELHI (UPI) Minister Prime Jawahajral Nehru was under heavy political pressure Saturday to revise Indian foreign policy; in light of angry Chinese Communist blasts against Indian "intervention" in Tibet. j1 ; Reliable' sources said some members of his cabinet had advised him to be more j wary of the Chinese situation and to reform his policy accordingly, but that .Nehru still was convinced hts7 (policy of neutrality between East and West was NEW ; Flies to Gettysburg To Report to Ike On 'Package Proposal' X. ; , By- STEWART IIENSLEY . United Press International ..WASHINGTON (UPI) . , retary. of State Christian Herter A. Saturday challenged the Soviet Union to "honest" negotiations at the , forthcoming Geneva conference to settle the Berlin and German problems and ease European tensions. The Secretary .returned from a Paris meeting of the western foreign ministers and flew by copter to Gettysburg to report to Eisenhower von the ''complete agreement" the Allies, reached on a "package proposal" to.be handed Russia atlthe talks beginning jfay 11. V Herter conferred with !the chief executive on the glassed-i- n JOYFUL PARTING! President Eisenhower .shakes hands with ; Secretary of State of the Eisenhower home here for an hour and 15 min- - Christian Herter as the departs from IkeS farm at Gettysburg Saturday after his : utes. r ' f Both the President and his new (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). Secretary of State seemed pleased by the results of their talk. Eisenhower, personally escorted Herter to a waiting Marine Corps helicopter for the Secretary's return Herter a rrived in Washington flight to Washington. from Paris this morning! After a brief pause in the capital, he continued on to Gettysburg by heli- s.1. MUNICH, Germany (UPI) An tors has led, Jto - Ihearrest of " copter. -Wis. (UPI) APPLETON, Geriiian East intelligence officer "many" persons and their convicfarm ' The late Sen. Joseph McCarFlying to the Eisenhower to who fled West Germany has givH with Jlerter were ; White .House I.'. .) was eulogized en the Bonn government details of tion.; thy C Press' Secretary James HagerThe latest two Communist East Saturday as a man who "led a spy ring operty and Ma j. John S. Eisenhower, movement which . successfully a vast Communist., to flee to the West were Germans ating against the West German the President's -- son , and assistant awarea ofnationwide! "'promoted government and NATO Allies, Lt. Walter Glassl, 27, and Capt. rWhite House staff secretary. of the danger of Comness" disclosed ficials Helmut Hoefer. Both were--, with today. "Very Successful" j munism. ' A shiny green ; jeep with "Ike They said details supplied by the East German "peoples rmy" .) Sen. Styles Bridges this and other Communist defec- - espionage service, but apparently, and Mamie"v painted onfthe hood Glassl gave most of the details. drove to the helicopter to pick up praised the efforts ofat McCarthy a dedicaCommunism against to house him and take Herter the, Intelligence sources said Glassl's tion ceremony for a bronze bust For about 100 yards away. The presi of. checked with information story Tuesday the controversial political figearlier: by Lt. Siegfried dent; met him at the door land the supplied ure in the Outagamie; County two leaders went into 'conference of the. East German Dpmbrowski Courthouse, which .was attended shortly after 10:30 a.m. edt; military intelligence who fled last The meeting' broke "up at 11:45 by a large throng of people. , Kyear. The observance marked the - a.m. and the President, wearing a second The East German spy apparatus anniversary of the death plaid sports shirt, tan jacket and was to operate through three said of McCarthy due to a liver T slacks and bow tie, climbed into the Ministry for State agencies i. '. the jeefn with Herter and ioda the the Security, "coordinating adminIt was neld in the new court-- ; short distance to the heliport im-- i istration" of the Ministry .of Naprovised on a section of Ipasture in house, annex where McCarthy, tional Defense and the "independ. then a circuit judge, presided at j'-- front of the house. ent section" of the armed forces. Hagerty said Herter gave his the first jury trial to take, place NEW YOR$ (UPI) Leaders of Glassl also told of his own trainin the building Jn 1945. (Continued on Page Four) the nation's unionized steelwork-er- s ing in a spy (School which went and executives of the basic under the name of "high school steel industry made for the foreign political news servthis Captain Blasts Authorities weekend preparations ice." The school is located in for contract negotiations opening Gransee and each student works Tuesday. under a code name. K David J. McDonald, president of .the United Ste61 workers of America, said Friday he did not believe faiere .'would be a steel strike this summer providing management gives up its insistence on a wage WEST VANCOUVER, B.C. siniboine and the U.S. Submarine freeze. He said the union would i (UPI) A Norwegian sea captain Capitane. Capt. Alcher said its ask for. substantial 'Improvements By in wages, working hours,? vacations today blasted Vancouver, authori- - "entire midships" was destroyed. and pensions, and he j described PANA1V1A CITY (UPI) The 85 ties for letting red tape snarl res-- i arguments that higher labor! costs men arid a . Heroes Lauded d girl who cue' operations when his ship was v would mean i higher steel prices . i ' Amerithis an" fire Ten Canadian and 10 ;U.S. Navy as "baloney." .; swept by explosion and :j thexi Cuba' can and from '1 country within sight of land. men were credited by the skipper "This is- just the same old gave up without a struggle were But Capt. - William Alcher, 52, with .most of the work that led to story," said McDonald, who is brought to Panama City today showered praise and gratitude on meeting with the union's and locked, up in the National Canadian and U.S. Navy; volun-- i the fire being quelled and the ship policy committee. "The Guard jail. wage teers and local fishermen! whose finally being towed into the Bur- companies always start by saying authorities - said i' quick action may have saved his rard Dry Dock in Panamanian Vancouver, they will give no; concessions. But j' 5,300-tofreighter Ferngulf from where it . arrived at about mid- they don't mean' it. They never they would be prosecuted but it was expected their sentences, if singing near here; Friday night. iv-night. The Canadians were led by do.T-- zv ' An industry source said that ne-- . any, would be lenient in view of Five crewmen' were injured,' Navy Commander K. Ej Lewis and two critically, when the lumber- - the Americans by? Chief Petty Of- gotiations will convince the un- their quick surrender when they laden Ferngulf drifted near the ficer J.L. Scrimager cf San Di- ion's representatives' that steel heard Cuban Prime Minister Fiof their mouth of Burrard . Inlet off West ego, Calif. management "isn't kidding." The del Castro disapproved , actions. The Canadian if and U.S. ships source said leaders of big steel 700 tons df .'fuel' oil j Vancouver, were tied up near 'each other at were . agreed on holding the line The invasion force surrendered ablaze in its main tanks. a dock when the call for heir ar- against any . inflationary demands pat the coastal village of Nombre S.O.S. Unanswered rived. The fire partyj was or- made by the union, especially a de Dios Friday in a ceremony ' filled more with joy than sorrow. '! wage increase.--- , "I sent an S.O.S. for a fireboat ganized within minutes.', and doctors as soon as the explosion occurred," Alcher told a At 90th Anniversary Celebration May 9 reporter. "We were told by the City of Vancouver that we were outside their limits." He said that more than an hour later he received a message that a fireboat and doctor were comPROMONTORY SUMMIT (UPI) day earlier than, the actual an- nated a steam locomotive built :. v... bing;' Two ceremonies May 9 will niversary date May 10, because in 1901. "We saw no fireboat, but a mark the 90th anniversary cele- that falls on Sunday. ' Gov. George D. Clyde will noRoyal Canadian Air Force heli- bration of the driving of the goldThe major feature of th3 cele- tify President Eisenhower of the copter came and circled," he said. en spike which marked comple- bration will be dedication of: the creation of the museum by us"It did not land. We had no doc- tion of America's first transcon- Railroad Museum being ing the telegraphic services of tor on board, so for an hour the tinental railroad at Promontory created byVillage the National Society Frank L. Davis, 82, ,Tremonton. men had no treatment except Point. of Sons of Utah Pioneers to per- Davis is the son of Walter Davis, from me. I kept shoving morphine The. first ceremony will be held petuate the story of the driving who was the telegrapher who. sent into them." at Promontory1 Summit,, the ac- of the golden spike in 1869. the news of the, completion of the The Ferngulf burned for nearly tual site of the spike driving, at Union Pacific Railroad has con- Pacific Railroad 90 years ago. steam locofour hours before the fire was 10:30 a.m. The second or major tributed, a Horace A. Sorensen will be man2 coach and a aging director of the Sons of Utah brought under control mainly by ceremony will be held at p.m. motive, a passs baggage-posraV;to the museum. Pioneers Railroad Village Muvolunteers from the Canadian de- in Corinne. The observance will be held a Southern. Pacific Railroad has do- - seum. stroyer escorts Saguenay and As- - .best.. !!'. i ; ; President East--We- st sun-por- ch . , T McCarthy Gets Praise for Role Against Commies , - West jSermdny Plagued By Gprn mu rliis Spy Ri n g t - 4. J .r ; (R.-Wis- , (R-N.H- - " . i - ail-me- nt. i-- ' , mon7 Steel , J Gompa nies Slate Talks j -- . . behind-the-scen- - ape Snarls Rescue last, Fire at Sea .'; ' : . es Panamanians J . Comp! ete Red Takeover in Iraq Feared t ' CAIRO (UPI) Middle East diplomats - said today the Commu nists would succeed in taking oyer all of Iraq if Premier Abdel Ka rim Kassem gives in to their two latest demands, j' y Communist newspapers in Baghdad have been blaring demands that the Reds be taken officially into the- government. Kassem lis expected to enlarge his cabinet in the near future. The second, Communist demand was for, arms for their" "peoples resistance" forces which already constitute a veritable Communist n t militia in Iraq. The diplomats had hoped" that Kassem could use the: army to control the Communists if he in deed wanted to control ithem. But they believe now it wall be too late to hold the reds iff they win their two demands: The Iraqi Army has not reacted noticeably , to the growing Communist power since the; crushing of an mutiny in the northern city of Mosul: last March. v ". The Communists have! been try ing for months to infiltrate the army and were believed to have ' ever , increasing influence. , Middle East .diplomats believed only a new upheaval in Iraq or an unexpected stand on the part of Kassem could change the pessimistic picture; An outright Commuiisit takeover in Iraq would fulfill the. age-ol- d Russian dream of a position at head of the Persian Gulf. It. would put increasing pressure! - j i j 171-mem-b- er r r . n : : ;H':-...f;- i ! ' aims. '? , st s ful."'. ' , ; ';p-'- Western diplomats in Paris 'said privately they expected .just enough concessions from Russia at the foreign ministers conference to force the Allies to attend a summit conference. Macmillan said he and. other leaders hoped the summit 'would not be regarded as a single act (Continued on Page Four) " . Ike Watches Derby, mutually inconsistent," Joseph A. Jenkins, a 1957! Eisen hower' appointee to the NLRB, said "As- it now stands, the! bill could, scarcely be called ainaodel of legislative draftsmanship l and will undoubtedly be ,changeli "'in the. House." 4''.. ' "I believe President, Eisenhower is correct when he says' the present bill is inadequate with respect to the secondary boycott, blackmail picketing and in fome otherareas," Jenkins said. M He said he was speakingjj "in all due deference to the Senate" but .must protest the bill as inconsistent in Itself with conflicting provisions . and in relation to y Act. In addition; the Jenkins said, "It has ne adequate legal machinery for enforcement." Jenkins, a 1937 University of Utah graduate, returned; toj his alma mater for Law Day - observances , sponsored ' .by. the j law school and the Utah State j Bar. He said the' five - member NLRB deals with basic law relating to unions and called .itj'Vthe most powerful body 'of its kind in existence in the civilized wcrld." In regard to the steel industry ; Jenkins said? "You can argue one side oar the other, but in the United States today you have about as much chance: of getting rid of industrywide bargaining as you have of getting rid of U.S. Steel; fcorp. You're not going to get rid of either, one." He added that as a labor attorney and citizen, not as a member of the board; he would! hate to see a pay hike in the i steel industry that would "add to Infla- tion.' "j - .': ' 'Taft-Hartle- I " ! j. : " ; GETTYSBURG, Pa. golf-car- . ! has-used- , first-perso- n ; Shot , i y, i j' ':i ', r' . UtaH Mother Leaves Today For New York " . ' ; . j j. Gash Crisis rffIn Michican i - Still Serious . ;y'':1l'.h:;; LANSING, MichJ (UPI) Michi' gan's austerity program was eased slightly today but Gov. C Menen Williams arid GOP law- -, makers were no nearer to solving the state's dash crisis.. The state Administrative Board lifted its ban on 'payment of travel expenses and announced the state Employes' Credit Union would provide interest-freemerto state? workers who gency loans suffer payless paydays. The" board, alarmed about its credit! rating, also promised bankers it would give payment of credit; obligations equal Apriority v with '.'.welfare payments. ;,( Williams, put the board on 24-hour alert over the week ' end to Abe prepared to "plan, the resumption of payrolls" in case there is a break in the political stalemate over the best source of emergency ' funds. No. break was In sight. The (Continued on Page Four) e . j RICHMOND (UPI) Utah Mother of the Year, Mrs. Eva Leona Hansen Carlson of Rkhmonol will leave Utah by plane Sunday for New York City to compete, in the national Mother of the Year contest. She will be in New York Tuesday through Friday. j ' , - Is Delayed ' ', f WASHINGTON (UPI)P- - techni cal difficulties have forced post ponement of three U.S. space launchings s c h e d u 1 e-- for this to spring, one .of them an effort ' fire a rocket to. Venus , The National Aeronautics and . Space Administration said Friday night the shot to Venus would be tried later. Official sources said the next likely time would be . January 13, 1961. The space agency had planned and an a Thor-Abl- e Atlas-Abl- e ' on Venus June toward 3 and June 4. .. ; . to launch . ' - ' HERALD INDEX Amusements Business News Central Utah News .............. 12 ( 14 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10 25, 27 Classified 30, 31, 32, 33 Comics . . ...... ............ 28 29 Editorial National, World News .. Obituaries Society Sports Stocks 2, 12, 14, 15, 16, 30, 34 4 :A'AA: 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 17, 18, 19, 20 4 . ... ........ I Htttttw" j ! (" ity of the Nation," ("was. prepared ' under supervision of. a' committee headed by Gen. Matthew B. Ridg-waformer chief of staff, who longwas at odds with President Eisenhower's "new1 look" military A ri V strategy. The association said the army is unable to keep its combat units at full strength and is noli only Outmanned, but "outgunned" by Communist forces, It sild th Army j should have at leit one million men Instead of the 870,000 allowed by the Defense Depart-V ment.; j ' The Army, should have its own large transport planes (instead of relying on the Air Force) sufficient to transport two divisions from this country to any part of the world where they might b needed, the report said. As one reason for a larger U.S. Army, the association contended that' among the 44 countries r ' cetving US. military aid, ther were some that lacked "a strong fighting .spirit." The nations wr not identified. ' The report also criticized 'spectacle of the United States re-ducing the strength of its ground (Continued, on Page Four) . - ! - ' . Plays Golf " '.:, 1 j the central problem of our age." Macmillan '' outlined this aim Friday night in a Glasgow speech summing up bis government's stand before, the May 11 Geneva' meeting. the "After foreign ministers to a meetlook forward meeting I 'of" of the heads goverriment ing concerned at a summit conference," Macmillan said.' "The form which the summit conference takes must, of Course, depend on the result; of the foreign ministers' meeting t his month. But I am hopeful that sufficient progress will be made to make a . summit conference fruit- . -- The report, entitled "The Secur- .y . ! Ven f ' I ;".-'- Labor Reform Bill Called Inconsistent Bfitish Prime Minister: Harold By "United Press International ,A Democratic member- - off the Msicmillan, apparently anticipating this, let it be known he favors Nc tionaL Labor Relations Board a series of summit meetings to told a Law Day audfiencey in Salt solve East-Wedisputes as "a Lake City Saturday rjght the Ken- new and imaginative approach to ncdy-Ervi- n labor bill that passed ; . , . ;. j " , -- Nov. 27 kind of forces necessary for pre- venting or winning limitediwar. . The association isi a sort of unofficial voice - of the Army, made ' up of retired officers, other veterans and persons) generally in- terested in furthering the Army's : (UPI). President Eisenhower had a"sports afternoon Saturday golf shortly after lunch,1 then a look at the Kentucky Derby over television. The chief executive played 18 holes at the Gettysburg Country dub which dried out sufficiently overnight to accommodate his t; electric Eisenhower was unable to play Triday because the course was too soggy for his golf buggy which , since his 1955" heart he A attack in Denver. During the morningj he conferred, at his farm with Secretary, Iran which has ja Commu- of State Christian A." Herter who nist underground of its own and rushed" to Gettysburg immediately has1 been under a heajvy propa- after his return from Paris to make a report on the ganda attack from Moscow. western foreign ministers meeting; The President seemed in fine spirits after the conference, as. he with Herter in' a shiny drove US green jeep from the house to an (Continued on Page Four) i f ob- predicted today Russia wotild turn down the West's "package" deal on Berlin and Germany at the j Geneva Confer-- i ence this month.; '..j - j althe West no said had They ternative to offer now and that the Geneva meeting at best would j postpone the ultimate showdown ' over Belin called for by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev last anti-governme- nt - . I -- . ij- servers .' i . 5 I in-vtd- ed little-Centr- al : .' ; ' '' . sloe-eye- By JOSEPH W. GRIGG United Press International PARIS (UPI) Diplomatic ? Invasion! Force Locked Up , WASHINGTON, May 2 (UPI) The Association of U.S. the Army, attacking administration military policies, called Saturday for a cut in the Strategic Air Command and an increase in ground forces The association charge! the government with, "Overt reliance on thermonuclear weapons" and neglect of the Approval of 'Package' ' G si Votes Unanimous "a Hi.-- ., SAG - V: n ArmylJJoit A Council r 15Nation !!.' - NEHRU UNDER PRESSURE TO SHIFT POLICY , - "... , - ' : Secretary ode rom Paris Meet . I 81 r-:- ,- n vM.J vt i ' and colder through Sunday, with occasional rain or snow. Saturday's low In Provo, 44. High forecast for Sunday, 43. PROVO, UTAH . COUNTY,: UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 3 1959 11 '. . V 49 CTP. Red Mostly Cloudy J, v pc 05 FR i i' ! Utah to Me vlveyMemory oi GoldehS rr 1 i j : ; ' . . ar nr : -- ' The ceremony at Promontory Apostle Harold B. Lee of the ofSaints- Church will Summit will feature unveiling of fer the dedicatory prayer. The a -- plaque designating the site as afternoon program will, be telecast a historic site of the National " ; Parks Service. ;, by KSL-TLatter-da- y - j V. Speakers at the morning ceremony will Include Harold D. Fabian, chairman, of the Utah Parks Commission; Dr. Lelahd Creer, Salt Lake City, president of the Utah Historical Society;; and Robert J. Porter of the Box Elder j . . . . County Ckmxnissicn. , Speakers at the afternoon 1 J cer- emony will include Gov. Clyde, President Karl B. Hale of the National Society of Sons of Utah Pioneers, and Dan Keeler, who will be master - of ceremonies. This ceremony will include a. of the driving 'of the golden spike. That' what Stephen Tenold, 'CALL THE 15 months, of Minneapolis, Minn., might be "thinking as he faces a .knotty problem aboard the liner Oslofjord at New York. He's all tied up while awaiting- departure for Norway to visit mother's parents. (Herald-UP-I Telephoto) CAPTAIN I' - . fv |