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Show - - . 'gr NV . . , , , , i , , - - - . , , , . , - ' , . , . , . , -- ,., - , ' (See detapi on Page , . , . - - - A-2- , . ., . , , , . . - , - 'alg8ra - ' a ....., , a a a J :i VOL:352 .. TA, - :Tkl- , : , i No. 113 5AL1IAKECITT;111TAH. ' -- ---- -- . -. ' -- ' ' - - ' Editorial Offices- 33 Richards St. News Information - ,1 Advertising-Circulatio- . - , ' - r . '- - , . , ., ' i ri . ,143 S. MalnSt. IMp iro , - - -- EL-5-7- - 1 - - 25 - , - 6 IIIST NIWIPAPIA NOW IN MOUNTAIN WITT'S - s , w , - ... - . , , - - Salt take CityMostly"clear,. UtahMostly clear Tuesday. - 7 -- THE WEATHER . -- - - 5C MONDAY4-,NOVEMBER-9i-19-5-9-- ... , , ,,,, . a( , .,, Bufferlone . ,,x .., x 0 0 t : . . ,. , Ilir 1 1 - . ,.. .., , k , 0 VII .111 .,. ., . u , II . , , t -- - - First Solid Proposal From Reds Fo- r-Ending Border Crisis ---- -. ,,,, ' ,,..k.,,...-:- . . ,4,.. NEW DELHI, , t - Chinese- - border. - with Prime Minister Sawahar lel Nehru in the "immediate future." It was the first concrete Red - - - , Iá I1 fr1 , ,,,...,,,,,,,...,,,,,,-",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,..,,,..,04,.4,6--- 16 to , . ' . , , Seri. Langer Dies Atf o '.. , - . ' , ,, , . ressure ii -- stee n Ta ts Taft-Hartle- y "". ... ,,,,,, ' ; t i' ' . , - 's '1, '' .; " ,;..ti ,',",-- , ' Colum-biaGeneva- 1li ,.,, A ' , ,. '''', - -- , , : t : , ,,:. - ,. - 4 :' .. - ' 43 i ; : A '': - ,, . ,,.. 4 , 'i ..: , i., ' s, ,..14,,,,,, -- , - ' open-heart- h ..; ' ; , .. s it . battery-were-schedule- d - - . r , - e ax , , .. . , , , , , - ,:: 0 Broadcast Coincides Peiping Radio's broadcast of the note coincided with the release in New Delhi of an earlier note from Nehru to Chou. India's note to Red China rejected as a "travesty of the truth" Chinese claims of Indian responsibility for the clash between Indian and Chi nese troops Oct. 21 in the Ladakh region of the border states of Jammu and Kashmir. Nine Indians were killed in the battle. The latest Chinese note was reply-t- - ,1 it . e ing a - -- Taft-Hartle- 80-da- y 41- - - - . , I rt, --- ,- , 116-da- '1- 73 In Capilal o ; 1 , ' of-tw- :Adopted the facts. : - , -- disregard- rork Call Goes Out To Miners, Rcillmen , -- .., 4 ... 1- an attitude - : , night. apparently to consider the Chinese note which vvas dispatched from Peiping on Saturday. Also attending the thrèëhOtirT cabinet meeting was Indian Army- Commander K. S. Thimayya. source close to the eabinet said Thimayya had been ordered to meet Communist force with force, but' not to begin an offensive. Open To Study The order to Thimayya would indicate Nehru onsidered the Chou proposal not entirely satisfactory, but open ' to consideration. -- - The note from Chou En-la- i whose contents was one were disclosed Monday by the New Delhi and Peiping gow ernments, whose relations with each other have, deteriorated steadily under a barrage of charges and counter-chargesThe Chinese note said it was I it a7bad - : t d Nehru called his cabinet into - . - " Claims - Reiterated Indian sources said, however, that the Peiping note reiterated Red Chinese claims to certain Indian territory which Nehru is pledged not to give at--1- al , -- session' l , - - ing - ri-- - r fof-settl- ' - ,-, - . , . , Chinese proposal the increasingly bitter border quarrel between the two ' -- .- LI I - ' . The, sweet smell of prosperity began to return to' Utah t I Monday as steelmaking operations at U.S. Steel's Geneva 117 !: T I 11.1. 11110 IS 11141111 k began moving ahead "on - schedule... d 4 '6 ts z rn Coal miners, constructfon workera-anrailroad employes, , w:h , .l 4 , a lAo . strike, wer0 lafti aft becalm. nt thncdpplinz . , ., , , , , , ' . in to work to t. report , began ductiori- workers- ireturned to A I :- various ' part3 of Utah Monday. the nation's steel- mills In In. ' 7 , ' etf , , 2. , U.S. -all at officials steel r,f. 1 , - SE N.- - WILLIAM LANGER ' creasing numbers Monday as , ,s s1 j a- ' locations In Utah report that , Of , ---- trickle first the steel - t poured turbulent career ends the tall back to work of some ' . t . frontreheatetfurnaces , ' ' , fru-cel ' 6,000 employes either on strike ' '14 Img an injunction-force' ' I or layoff because of the strike a founmoilth strike. lin I I Workers, grumbling attouti 1 Or !I I I Is going "very well' the ' injunction I .... .. i' j Excellentprogress Is being I which ended, their 0 i 1 11 's made, they report, to return I , , . ;,.,,.:,... , , , ,. tapped a few furnaces , , l' i ' to I normal The i " ,;,. 1 while maintenance crews toiled ,' operations ' ..., 1 ' '4, to repair damage to other I. ' , :.,Nklt ' strike, which was ended Satur- 1 I ,, , - 11.1 P 1)- - 4 "4N4 WASHINGTON , , I , : idleness. caused dlities by long Injune-ra- ' ' itk. , or 0,004, , day by a , administration 1 tempo. e Although smoke belched ,,,, : i It, ,,,,., tion, affected 4,800 workers at si;.'.. .. t, ' on from coast to 1 '''''4,,,"7's,,y , , from furnaces "' 0'4 managepmr ,,,, ,o Ironton ''' Geneva and the or plants, labor and .;',' for a ' .,,,'' '-' , coast, lest than, half of the 1 , ,.., ' ' ,:,--800 layoff because, of the steel strike settlement Monday,: ' , 500M0 strikers were - called g',"" ' ' - 4-' -' , -- on ,,,,,,, 1 ' -1, W. A S flINGTON, IT3PI) but made it clear it' will push ,,,,os. '4,., ' ,i,,,os .,,vollill strike-- , at 1c,,e; back to work and full produc- r ' ',-- , .. ,,-- , '',2... -- ',', -The body , of ,, Sen--W'- aliam ',4'' hard1yrevent-erestImpuo- n ,I ,'' ., , r"'"It, 1 ', , ; , tion appeared as much as six coal- minei Id Carbon CotInty, ' ' ' ' -- ' x ill' , ,, ' '', ' , of i po- weeks Langer- taway, half of the , )1,, 1 and 235 at the Columbia Iron ' 3, ' ' ''Ak,,, ' litical maverick ,', who died duration of the Chief Government Mediator ' v Court V ,',..., -Supreme ' ', 7 0,0P4rMines near Cedar City. ; , ;,;00,'.7k 4 , Joseph F. Finnegan said he did Saturday night, , will lie in directed injunction period. state in the Senate chamber Ifere In summary is, how not planto, call for renewed -- -- ,,..., , , f ',. .....;..,,, In addition to millhands, reit ' workers are affected by negotiations "for about two Tuesday. ' ' ' It call orders went to rail worki co ItIht The office of Sergeant-atArm- s weeks." He litAilk...'''44 added, 'i ' however, 1 .; end of the steel strike' Great Lakes ore-- , ship .,. ; , .;, ',. . Joseph C. Duke an- ers, f ,...s:f i t that the federal mediation '' . -'.' . iron '4,-- , !,,.'.',. '.; , .)" , ' t ' nounced that the late senator's crews, and coal : and 4 Geneva Steel--A- n estimated servicewould resume its et. -' k ' i. , ',,,it , ..,0411 , ' ft' 4. ''''' Awl& 4 '1" ' ,. ' forts to settle the strike "as remaln L for, six ' body ;'' 1' 4 ' 1,800 workers were back on 4... 4,4 '..- k But as steel men returned , ' ' 10 am. to Cp.m. soon as feasible!' :r 1,,, ....,.k i '''t , o;1440" ; ' t' I's and Geneva the the at 14.11V. job ;4 4 on swwo:i.11db-- of the chamber gradually to their fobs,' the - ,". Labor Secy. James , ' ' , -, , steel-shor' -I r. - Servetr lot 19 t f. li:eittori plants ortsit 'three Mitchoif underscored automobileindus-rhk. - , '''''"'141 the ad. , . iT1,4:4 1 ,, ,,, ,, ,.., .., : , try prepared to lay off even , Moresze ex- ministrationl determination to years. lb shiftsMonday. , 4, the first time a m o r i, :fits i supplies ,, ,1,1, 1, ',lulu, ,,,,....',. to be called back on keep the steel mills going after ,w,, li. ..k ,,,. .,v :1 pected ,. deceased senator's-bod- y has dwindled and law Aatotektosos,,,ta:,11.1114. ,..., w.;.,',It I .41 .,, Tuesday. Three of Geneva's 10 back to work order IP. 4,;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,K,,,-44,,,--- been returned to the chamber supply quantity from reopened on ' ' ' ' ' expires ' , soon. was Some mills in furnaces were Jan. 26. sight big since the. death of Sen. Joclock the ,once again as they report to ' FIRST REPORT FOR SIIIFTPunching ' 250,000 auto workers,. mostly Congressional- - Actlonfired up late Sunday and two, seph R. McCarthy work on the first shift at Geneva Steel are, left to right Boyd C. Harper, Pleasant ' See STEEL on Page A4 1957. A funeral service was , , , c Mitchell said President ElGrover David K. Riches, Orem, and Cleo J. Snarr, Midvale. more units began heating up ; held ' for McCarthy in the -....- .., . . ' ..,. :.: .: senhower would '. give Congress At Geneva's long Monday.' ., ,lemtwraktommmooptoopsfAxl ( chamber, but no similar plans recommendations for ending ,... .. were announce& for Ilanger. . ., the-- walkout r,., i lows oU$LcQkec to norttached by-agrememtvas first ..,,.... the time the - Eulogized By Morse , ,r ,, , ,,, be charged with coal late Mon- return to work Order expired. , Langer4 who died in his SS Finnegan uidlis decision to sleep of .a beart attack, was day and Coal was expected to mediation postpone conferby Sen. Wayne eulogized Ironbe charged in some of ,., i ences was made at the Morse , as "the kind ton's 56 ovens Tuesday. Since of both sides "in view request of liberal who never comproi4, I of the , .....,., - ..,, , mised his convictions." Saturday afternoon, coke plant multiple problems each faces , :.: workers have been bringing in connection with the reopen. Langer's body was found e I ing of a facilities ,.. daughSunday morning by ,, , the ovens slowly back to nor- - across the country." ter, Mrs. Mark Erskine Gokey of about mal temperatures Informal discussions with of Fargo, ND., who had been the parties will be continued 2,100 --.. fahrenheit,. his , him degrees home here. at visiting , during this interim His death left the political he Carbon County Coal Mines said in a statement period," "I will set lineup of the Senate at 65 -' i (i, 0. ",: :::;:.3......:' , 4' a definite date for resumption ,,,.,:. ,'', Some 800 coal miners began .......:....:.;:.......:::;'. 34 Republi, Democrats ... l, '' ! i '... ,...,,,, 4 1i I ,".. '7' :',..'::::Z - :.1:' :::::'..... to the Columbia-Genev- a of mediation sessions in this cans. However, GOP Gov. ; returning '...''A el Steel's coal mines near dispute as soon as feasible." John E. Davis of North Da.. H said it be would .1....,:,;;Jit-:- ,, i Em1 to name a up kota Dragerton --early Monday. , to Cog; 1., tb settle the strike , ployes at the coal :washing Republican to succeed Langer. ,,,,, ..,.......,,,..., ,, , i an election inthat eventIn$ . ( r were . pIantnear'Wellington ., ; Mitchell year, this could added, Tuesto to their ': jobs report ' 7', : .4'.:;; 11 Langer, 73, whose wife died ,, ': nt4 '1'. 14'''''''''' 800 miners lead to legislation that would About It - 1 a 1,11 morning. faliday in been ' had vo, last August, .",y ',VIP in the Interests of either, f,,,,,,,-'''''' at the three Kaiser Steel COrp. not beyears. ... ingbealthunion- orinanagement 4 tfiff mines atSunnysidestarted But he apparentlyhadregov-. Ends Jan- 26 last week , coal production ered from an attack of pnewhen Kaisetsigned art Inde-underthe umoniahesuffered ih,Septero pendent contract with the der, upheld, by the Supreme ta steelworkers to end the strike. Court Saturday, the strike senator I The North-Dakocould be resumed after the SO- .A remained a political nonconf1- Cedar Citylron,Blinet-,--fwhich ends Jan. 26. - - the end of - his g ormist-to began-puttin86 crew of workers reconvenes Jan.. 6. Senate career, which began in the Columbia Iron Mines Congress Mitchell, appearing on a na 1941. In one of his last major at Desert Mound a n d Iron tionwidetelevision program, Mountain into operation Mon- said he was legislative acts he joined the very hopeful" with Sen. Wayne Morse..(Dday. Fuli shifts are expected could be settled during ' o Ores) in at the mineeruesday morning. dispute that perl Senate-vot- es the Lan,- About 235 iron mines employes drum-Griffistrike at - the have been-- vn labor ribrm bill, mines. Also. idled by the strike Langer's ,death brought to , .,. , ' , 1 were 100 Union Pacific Rail- Today's 'News' e,a close a turbulent, .. I . , 1 t road employes and about - 80 ., . -- , .,. 1 , political career. i -- See GENEVA on Page A8 , a meeting --- , 1 d , - ' n . - r : , - - - 4tIolficer Flow ' (UPI)Com munist Chinese Premier Chou Enlai Monday proposed crebuffer zone ation of a to prevent furtherbloodshed along the disputed Indian-Re- " , ' , 4 - , . , ...,. (D-Ore- :it , , , ', :(::....'.... :,', ::'.....:.::....::' ,.......,,,',f ..' T i ,. . ., ::-:,.- . ru eletter-fronl-Neh- on Sept. 26. The Indian note disclosed Monday was in re 1)13r- to another Chinese note, thig one dated Oct , ,,: , - r - , 7 - A ; . ...,.. A.A- 110figloolowill - ,..,;..),.,....;,99.4.494 V.., .99, Taft-Hartley- Capsule Failure - day-perio- Rid IiiShorit ',VANDENBERG AIR d casting-the-only-tw- ffWtmetionTictlië electri cal system of the Discoverer VII satellite was blamed Monday for the '.United States' fourth straight in recovering-- a space - failure capsule from orbit. t'The malfunction occurred of the power sup, in that part ply which provides electrical energy to actuate the separa, tion sequence and maintain the vehicle in a stable attitude," the Defense Department's ad. vaned research project agency In Washington said. Chances at successful : polar-orbitin- -- n g . i at ranee by space experts to 1. 27 by The CarI Trucks - Crash 700 d - ', ' I,- 7-Di- Tio-J- . l , ,, AL. - The- truly - generous'- is . ., - ---- - - - ' . e 4 , , , t - . - - - , - The parcel truckand the other tanker did not catch fire, accoiding to the state police. But combined efforts of the fire departments of West Brooklyn And Compton-we- re ' required to extinguish the blazing soybean- oil. ...' - - 1 ' ; .. - . - - - -- - k il 1 Bob:CiarO;sy,i7.. , K.6ifd:;Tiep--- d , . ,,,v, , , ' to life as steam begins to belch forth from--hearths and furnaces- - Nearly 2,000 called back to work Monday. , GETTING VPSTEAlilThis photo takenMonday morning by Deseret News Chief Photographer J M-Heslop shows the huge Geneva Steel' facility coming , CALIF. (UPI)--Polic- e Monday said Bob Crosby was stabbed twice BEVERLY -' Saturday-night-- 1111-1--- by- his-wi- check Fieremen Blaze 7-Death-Tanker unisia Vote Keeps Chief' -- -- ' , ' - -- - -- -. - , - .. n - Avorkers,1 ,,000 , -- - -- w -At - -- . . - . , . - ,. ' 1- fe - J'une after he- beat her to the floor during a family row. Police Chief Clinton' AnderFarst Baltot ; son said Crosby was sthtbed I In the left shoulder and the left forearm with a -letter opener. He said Crosby, : I (UPI)-TAmoco fire TEXAS to tanker he' line HousToN, Virginia, tile , , who had been drinking earlier ' , out of for leave and New home York tanker' Amoco VII aboard -- the readyto in the evening- - became bel;-7 ' ' at 4 am. - ' -oinia. which Wiled at I eas t seven crewmen portEyewitnesses ligerent and struck his wife. said a fire danced across , Mrs. Crosby told Anderson oancl. threatened another Texas City dig. the water from the barge to the ship.TUNIS WM) President the , bandleader, brother of aster. for 18 hours Sunday, appeared Monday The first explotion on the Amoco VirUabib Bourguiba and his Neo- crooner Bing Crosby, knocked , to be whipped. -ginia shook houses- five or six miles away.' her to the floor. He twisted 'We still have an impending danger," Jini Edmonds, 46, Is a cargo inspector. Destour Parti rolled to nation-- the letter opener' from her Sometimes he is absent-mindeEdmonds wide election triumph Monday hand and fled from the house Fire Chief C.' M. Bullock said. , The blackened ship continued to smoulder started to go aboard the Amoco Virginia .practicEdly unopposed.' , In his automobile. ' -minutes before it happened. Then he re, In its slip tinder a thick coat of loamite. ' As was almost inevitable, , , At least 44 persons were injured in the membered he had not brought his inspectien returns an ava showed is early back-to-hauto-,--Russ thewent 18 lie of with hitiv series of eight blasts, including .paper Ship Bags Whale' lanche of votes for the governmobile rescue to first crew and 25 firemen The blast the and sent. get forms. Russian LONDOIst (UPI)--- 4 N . ii jiving .tocover. ... ment in Sunday's presidential , fleet leerby the world's Whaling were two blasts. The ordeal that brought death to at there Then' and more Then general elections, the first , , " since Tunsia was proclaimed largest mother . ship, "Sovetleast seven men, possibly triore and en-- three more. - "I' guess the good Loid was watching, a rerlublic in 1957. who live along the , ', dangered 50 skaya illitrairia" has reached The voters' enthusiasm was gntarctle waters and bagged waterfront where the gasoline is stored over me," Edmonds said. "If r hadn't forgotten the forms I would began early Sunday ,morning. probably be dead also indicated by a heavy turn- - Its first whale Moscow Radio : Out at the polls. . 12 :30 a.m. & barge watleeding gatio-no, reported Sunday. -- - -' r .. N mem-wer- . ,, I v, , - 7 o' t Traci Stewing I , , s ,. Iowa.- ,,,,,-,- 4 , lioCHELLE, ILL. (upi) Seven persons, six of them members of one family, were killed Monday t in a fiery wreck of ,three trucks and an automobile. - were Tw- o- of - the tankers. One, loaded with soybean oil, caught fire and traf-- , fie on busy U.S. 30 was blocked more than three hours. The accident' occurred four miles west of tile VS. 51 intersectom which is 11 miles south , .. of here. fi The dead, identified bYfuneral director, were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Martin, Prophets-town- , 111f their son and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Martin; their - daughter Mr. and Mrs. and Willard Hartshorn,, and the driver of the burned tariker, Edward . P. Hirsch, , Clinton, , , - and he who loves not ' oth,ers lives unblest. Henry Home -- - the trUlgatOiSei-- - - - -- - ; v. l son-in-la- , - - : r - h 310-poun- ( ,. capsule, jammed with sden- failed - to tific eject Sunday as planned. It remained in the nose of the .1,700-pounsatellite which war successfully ' launched Satur-, day. ,The satellite with its capsule cargo was expected to stay in a polar orbit for, about two weeks. 'It was reported slowly tumbling end over end. t ., 45-ye- , -- ' , - ,.'...!'-i.;L AL Ai- - ,,,- ,e,..01' AO ottne.ad,-.- 1 .iP,---.A-4e,.-4 Vt -!.0 '4 In New Trouble- - - - Master detective Dick Tracy Intelligent, fearless ",' and courageous won't be worth a plug nickel if he doesn't get out et' THIS 'jam! -Our - hero is : being held cap- tive by a gang of ruthless un- derworld hood- - Mr. Tracy 'urns. Will he be saved? Will his fellow officers find him In time? What about Lizz? Read - - Dick Tracy daily in the Deseret News. But first a word from our spon. sot' about reading enjoy' ment: ' . A SECTION - National-Foreig- n ' News - Society Editoral Pages SECTION cltyR e ona1 News a -- Theater , - Sports Comics Financial - 9,10 - - 8 1-- City-Region- - - - News - -- - - 11-1- 3 14, 15 5 .. itadio-T- Highlights . Obituaries Action Ads 1,2,9,10 az- ,,... 4-- 6 -- 7 8 - 9 r' , . 10 - Z - :'' aa d''' 44 .d -'- 's I' i' .'1.1.' r'd ,;-- - |