Show "TEMPERATURES THE WEATHER OGDEN: Partly cloudy today and tomorrow with scattered showers High 94 low 63 UTAH: Partly cloudy today and tomorrow Scattered showers or thundershowers High 97 low 68 Bcisi Chicaio TELEPHONE EX OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY MORNING AUGUST 11 4-77- 11 PRODUCTION? BERLIN (AP) — Soviet party boss Nikita S Khrushchev said yesterday the Soviet Union's industrial production will overtake that of the United States f - (d la) jj "We will also have a higher living standard than the V t ' X- - "I r 4SG ' rescue party atop Liger ALPINE RESCUE TEAM ATOP EIGER MOUNTAIN — Asnow ledge yesterday n its mountain in the Swiss Alps digs through an overhanging week just below efforts to reach iour starving and exposed Alpinists stranded for athe top of the peak party reached the summit of the 13000 foot mountain The rescue via another route but were unable to get a heavy rescue cable through the snow The men are trapped on the sheer north face of the rugged mountain— (AP Wirephoto via radio from Berne Switzerland) !' Ice or Lsvsl Kiorifs m 13036-foot-hig- h ly at circling observation planes disproving the report of a pilot rriHv Tu nf th climbers are1 — j Scores of mountain guides and experienced volunteers from five nations failed yesterday to reach the menThey fought a 70 mph gale Another attempt' will be made today Guides doubted the climbers would survive Some of the rescuers themselves experienced and strong ran into difficulties in the deep snow and blasting wind The stranded men are exhausted from exposure and lack of food LIKE The alpinists are clinging to the vertical rock face about 1200 feet from the summit too weak to move in any direction The man thought Friday to be dead is alone 300 feet below the ¥31 ' K t n § Olii ATOMIC ENERGY! Says Farm Women Should Save More Egg Money ethers' Rescue parties reached the tummit by a relatively easy route from nearby 11000 foot-hig- h Eiger Joch but they could steel cable not drag a 3000-foo- t -snow The plan through the deep was to lower the cable to the men and pull them to safety The powerful wind excluded the possibility of dropping the rescue equipment on the summit from a plane Late yesterday a large party of guides started a new effort to the rope weighing nearly drag half-a-toto the top of the mountain They plainned to reach the peak from Eiger glacier a longer climb but less snowy ment with the same care that branch gives to atomic energy because — like atomic energy —the price of eggs exert a tremendous influence on the- future of the (AP) — Mrs Coya Knutson a blonde Demo-- 1 cratic congf esswoman from Min-- 1 nesota has started a crusade for more egg money for American farm women The wheels of economic progress may grind to a halt she warns unless more cash is put into that old cracked sugar bowl in which the farm housewife WASHINGTON - nation" Malone Ready for Work ""-cu- u WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen said yesterday Malone he expects to return to his Senate duties tomorrow or Tuesday He entered Doctors Hospital last Monday for what he called "a I ! give-awa- v) general checkup" long cake modeled after liner President Roosevelt and singing of "Happy Birthday" by musical star Anne Rogers yes-- ! five-fo- ot terday featured a sumptuous luncheon in San Francisco honor- ing former President Herbert Hoover on his 83rd birthday Approximately 150 persons including four generations of the Hoover family attended the party aboard She American President Lines ship named for the 31st president Hosts were APL chairman Ralph K Davies and President j i i quite a show Evangelist Billy Graham said last night humanity was suffering "from spiritual disease" and too many persons were trying to fill the emptiness in their lives "by drinking sex and all the rest of those things" Graham told an audience of 15000 persons at Madison Square Garden in New York City that everyone listening to him had broken the Ten Commandments "You say to yourself 'I haven't committed murder but when you have hate in your heart it's the same thing" he said "Others will say they haven't committed adultery but if you have lust in your heart it's the same thing" Actress Marilyn Monroe who lost her baby by miscarriage and an emergency operation August 1 left New York's Doctors Hospital yesterday smiling but showing a strain of surgery Wearing a pink cotton dress trimmed with white lace the actress left her ninth floor room in a wheel chair and then walked slowly irom the building Her husband playwright Arthur Miller supported her as they made their way to a car especially chair equipped with a reclining Heavily made up Miss Monroe looked peaked but said "I'm feeling wonderful I have lost weight but I don't know exactly how George Killion ' : Following photographs of the four generations — Hoover a son 1 i two grandchildren ana tnree I i —the birthday on the promj party got under way enade deck with a toast to Hoover by Davies- Miss Rogers who sings the lead HERBERT HOOVER in the musical "My Fair Lady" Happy Birthday playing in San Francisco sang of one chorus Happy Birthday center on the south and the assemblage of kin old yachtingtmu u± BCC1uS uu5 and civic dignitaries coasi fripnrf town a in around second on big the zip in prince joined Next waiters brought m the black sedan without a word of cake modeled after the ship from police which had a lighted candle in its protest "Underage prince takes out a the single stack Hoover made took car" said the London Daily Herfirst slice and the waiters ald in a page one headline "I see over from there Prince Michael go driving" reported the Daily Sketch in an British newspapers yesterday MiPrince eyewitness story by columnist Sireported much" Ward mon chael—Queen Elizabeth's cousin Earlier it had been reported that Mirror a The reported Daily — is driving around without the prince who is two years be- that she was 16 pounds under her Newsmen at Cowes fashionable low the legal driving age made usual weight of 125 ) great-grandchildr- en 1 j J the nation's basic sible in future Whatever understanding may have been reached between Westthe 1955 ern and! Soviet leaders summit! conference that a nuclear war is impossible is regarded here as no longer valid It is jpresumed that 'Russia as well asj the Western powers g would iike to avoid a atomic holocaust and will make determined efforts to that end However the belief that any East-Weatomic conflict would lead tojtotal devastation is giving way here to the idea that the existence of small nuclear weapons will make a limited military clash or "brush fire" conflict en- irely Conceivable in the coming years AT YOUTH tyEET world-engulfin- LOS ANGELES j st and close mouthed Budolph Ivanovich Abel 55 is shown as he arrived in New York for arraignment on espionage charges 'ACCUSED SOVIET SPY — Won T Drop -- W Va HUNTINGTON (AP?— Lack of rainfall in the hills of West Virginia this summer has caused a moonshine whisky drought-i- n as well as plain water David H Walker a Federal Alcohol Tax Unit investigator (That's a revenooer son) said he's not been too busy ping this case" declared Assistant spies" lately because there aren't any stills in operation to be raided The drought has dried up mountain streams source of g water for stills and has dropped off to a trickle The 'shiners are too shiftless to tote water up the hills from wells says — Walker ! In Washington House Reput lican Leader Joseph W Martin Jr urged immediate passage of a bill to protect FBI files and quiet fears that a recent Supreme Court decision might force abanc donment of the Abel case "Unless we get action next week" Martin said "we will have failed the country m a crisis moon-shinin- Guiana Vote May Produce ' COURT DECISION The "crisis' was brought about by a U S Supreme Court decision last June 3 compeling the government to let defendants in Criminal cases see FBI reports of prosecuting witnesses Some Washington sources said the FBI would rather have Abel set free to return to his native Russia than disclose vital information on Soviet espionage in its files and identify its informants Tompkins in charge of what may be the biggest U S spy ring uncovered since Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of atomic espionage in 1950 made it clear that the investigation of the case could continue at full speed The FBI cooperated in the investigation despite the "danger" to its files t GEORGETOWN British Guiana (AP)— This lone British posses sion in South American elects a legislature tomorrow and po litical observers are figuring a victory for the Communists But hard British regulations ineffec may render the victory tive The chief Communist candi dates are Dr Cheddi Jagan and wife Janet his American-borAdmitted Marxists they head the People's Progressive Party Jagan won the last election here — in 1953— but' 133 days later the British sent troops to Georgetown to depose him on the grounds he was setting up a red state flanking the Panama Canal Since then the British have set up safeguards against a Com-d government At stake in the election are 14 of the 28 seats in the legislature Most Guianese say— and British officials fear—that Jagan more than likely will take a majority of them APPOINTIVE POWERS However the British gover em nor Sir Patrick Renison-i11 councilors to powered appoint and the assembly speaker Three members of the colony's government —the financial and chief secretaries and the are ex-o-f ficio members Even if Jagan wins a majority or all the 14 elective seats the government's total of 15 could prevent the implantation of Red n ! munist-controlle- s attorney-gen-eral-automatical- ly rule ited action but has been wlanin" all over the world as that if the Communists launched an aggressive operation anywhere the United States response might take the form of a strike directly at Moscow That of course would-atomic conflict mean all-oHowever the massic retaliation policy) was derived from the existence of an arsenal of atomic weapons of very great destructive capacity capped by the hydrogen bombi So long as thinking had to be conditioned by the existence of weapons of this type alone it was believed that a nuclear war would war and would be so be aniall-ou- t costly) as to be virtually unthinkable in any capital in the world ut The invention and progressive improvement of small nuclear weapons has changed this concept to the extent that it is already possible to imagine a nuclear war fought for very limited objectives and in a limited area This probably means less emphasis on retaliation of the "massive" variety and more on meeting the Communis challenge— should it ever be hurled— with very limited means at the point of attack or near it 2 The long argument among the military services over whethbe er the United States should all-oan to fight prepared primarily war of utmost intensity and perhaps of short duration may be resolf ed now The indicated eon? elusion is that the United States should be ready to fight either a total! intercontinental nuclear war or a limited carefully controlled perispheral conflict against primarily military targets for very limited military purposes Significant in this regard was a speech made at Norfolk- Va W yesterday by Admiral Arthur of the Radford retiring chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff He said the country's heavy striking forces must be sufficiently tiexioie to handle situations short of general varying from rnMlwar to limited aggressions" Those- familiar with official are grappling with such problems answers not sure iust how the will (work out in the long run ut - war-i-"situati- ons - currency MARILYN "FEELING WONDERFUL' husband Her fingers entwined with those of her playwright Doctors leaves Monroe Hospital actress Miller Arthur Marilyn in New York City yesterday "feeling wonderful" She entered the hospital on Aug 1 and lost her baby by miscarriage and an emergency operation— (AP Wirephoto) Editorial Page Obituaries Radio-TPrograms Sports Pages 10B 9B V Society Theater Page per cent premium over the official rate of 350 francs to the dollar Each of their dollars will buy 420 (francs just about the going rates in the Paris black market All imports except basic raw materials and fuels will be struck by a 20 per cent tax A 15 per centj tax on many imports has been in effect since April 20 8A 12A-15- A 1B-7- B SB Republic newspaper Sovietskaya Rossiva bitterly criticized Har vard University law student George Abrams of Newton Mas? for giving soapbox orations m Red Square on the jumtea ra tions report on Hungary Komsomolskaya Jravda said of course Mr Schorr as a correspondent can meet and talk with anybody he pleases "But who permitted Mr Schorr under cover of a press card to slander provoke and insult reHasn't spected- festival guests? Mr Schorr gone too farj in his correspondence activity?" i Some- - Americans at the youth festival continued to defy the State Department ban on visits to Communist China j Pa (AP) — A bazooka shell exploded yesterday and killed four boys— two pairs cf brothers —who were playing with the missile in a back yard The blast dug a crater four feet the deep in a spacious yard- at home of Mr and Mrs Leon Weav er near Weigelstown six miles north of this central Pennsylvania K city Police said the shell apparently was obtained two weeks ago when the Weaver family paid a visit to N C a soldier son at a 15 climbed Weaver Gary tree with the missile and dropped it to the ground near his- playmates police said The resulting blast broke windows in the house and shook the surrounding residential area When the dust cleared thres boys lay dead near the tree They were Joseph Weaver 10 Lynn Baker and Stephen Baker 9 Gary Weaver tell from the tret with his legs shattered He was taken to West Osteopathic Hospital here where he died shortly afterwards YORK Ft-Brag- g - " France Cuts Franc Value 20 Ups Tax on Imports No one is assuming Jagan will win all The "Jaganites" PARIS ( AP)— The French govare opposed chiefly by the youth- ernment announced yesterday a ful Linden Forbes Burnham who series of measures that add up to also calls his splinter organiza- a 20! per cent devaluation of the tion the People's Progressive franc for most sections of the with Party Burnham once allied comeconomy claims Jagan places Jagan Tourists and other individuals munism ahead of the welfare of and businesses bringing foreign British Guiana into France will get a INDEX -- al so-call- ed '5 - Gazettft Tho maMTinfi published a sarcastic article on This! concept is reported to Mumfora oia have inspired a profound rethink- Stanley student from Walnut ing of ibasic policy and planning theology Officials say tne iuu implica Creek Calif who has been picked tions will become clear only as up twice for being found in of tactical atomic weapons are fully near defense plants" in Mos- developed and integrated into the cow nation's military services How The Communist youth organizaever two points of manor impor a tance stand out speculatively at tion paper Komsomolskay BroadColumbia criticized Pravda the moment: 1 The Eisenhower administra casting System correspondent Daniel Schorr for allegedly stagtion has built its military-politicthe ing provocative television interpolicy toward Russia around views with Americans attending tneory or massive reiaiiauuu Sec J the festivaL enunciated This doctrine by Dulles several of State retary! BITTERLY CRITICAL years ago left loopholes for lim Earlier this week the Russian CONCEPT CHANGES Red Victory i publications attackeatwo more Americans yester day for their behavior at World Youth Festival here zi-ye- ar ARE STALEMATED U S Attorney General William F Tompkins "I have no desire to make anything easy for Soviet viet BSASIC RETHINKING DROUGHT'S AWFUL-EV- EN MOONSHINERS NEW YORK (UP)— The gov ernment vowed yesterday to prosecute alleged Soviet master spy Colonel Rudolf Ivanovich Abel to the hilt with or without disclosure of FBI secrets "I have no intention of drop- MOSCOW (UP)—Two So j Wide-eye- d ! se strategy military-politic- al The idea is to make the strategy conform to the spreading development of small atomic weapons and an official conviction that limited nuclear warfare will be pos- - -- ld Possible' A-W- ar WASHINGTON (AP)— President Eisenhower and the National Security Council are understood to be recasting NAMES IN THE NEWS A Cfeii!Caes Limited! 2 Ufahns Coast Crash WThat does im - New Weapons May Make Demo Gicjue Wants Reins Die the American farm 2 woman do with her egg jmoney? Mrs Kuntson tasked: "She uses In SAN PEDRO Calif (AP)— A it to finance the daily operation to uses Utah it of her household She couple returning from a day saves her egg money beach was killed along with at the herself and her family Prices of eggs at the farm as clothe man yesterday in a head-o- n chil another She uses it to educate her the from grocery distinguished auto crash on the Long Beach store-a- re so low she says that dren" farm treated freeway "The unjustly it doesn't pay to sell them The California Highway Patrol J save to woman is money going she Just to show people how she can" Mrs Kuntson identified the dead as Horace feels she inserted a speech in wherever Dean Crandall 26 and his wife said yesterday's Congressional Kec- "She is going toi use eggsuarm Geraldine 23 of 671 North 2nd ora arm 11 u suuuucu St East Provo Utah and John 6C" "' in daces she said sometimes that aer flume B Oliver 54 of Long Beach y at prices helps to get a point over Calif" And if the farm woman bakes Officers said Oliver apparently CAREFUL STUDY her own bread and does without control of his car swerved lost of grocery Mrs Kuntson said the price of an increasing number reover the diving strip of the freechain a can start eggs "should be studied by 'the- items it rammed into the Cranand said Kuntson Mrs way executive branch of our govern- action dall auto n (R-Ne- Ba WASHINGTON (AP) — Eisenhower administration officials launched a final effort yesterday to pump more power into the civil rights bill which the Senate reduced to a voting rights measure With the hacking of Vice Pres ident Nixon Justice Det attor- Senate's version without seeming neys worked on proposals they to surrender abjectly expect Republican House memObviously speaking with Eisbers to offer if the legislation Nixon has broader form is sent to a Senate-- ' enhower's approval tnld friends he wants a bill en House conference committee in this session of Congress There was no decision on the acted He has made it clear if possible final form of these proposals or the administration would like to how far they might go in seeking svoid a stalemate which would pnfnrcement of court orders m leave the legislation frozen un the general field of civil rights til the next session convenes m It was emphasized however that January no attempt was being made to Leader Remiblican Senatp include school integration of California has Knowland TACTICAL MANEUVER raised the possibility of a special was session in November if Congress move administrations The to act now But Nixon was fails circles in congressional regarded as a tactical maneuver aimed at said to be opposed to what might be looked upon as a political ses putting President Eisenhower ina sion calculated to produce a a position to compromise on measure closely resembling the Southern Democratic filibuster GRINDER WALD Switzerland (AP) — Fierce winds yesterday threatened ""avalanches - on the sheer north face of Eiger Mountain and defeated efforts to reach four starving and exposed alpinists who have been stranded there for a week All four raised their arms feeb- rA-i- :-i rorces kb ody Push i- ii £3 United States" Khrushchev boasted He did not set any dates The stocky Russian made his claim during a chat with factory workers in Communist East Germany's industrial city of Magdeburg near the Iron Curtain border East Germany's exports to the Soviet Union have been lagging seriously- - and Khrushchev coupled his boast with a command to the workers He told them to boost their productivity (AP)— Demo cratic National Chairman Paul M Butler said yesterday a little erouo of "saboteurs" is at work within the party trying to capture control so they' can dictate the 1960 presidential ticket Without naming names Butler said this group for selfish reasons would attempt to "wreck our pro grams and halt our progress "So long as I am privileged to be national chairman of our great "I will re party" Butler added and all at sist vigorously any made by any clique or tempts small group to gain control of our national party for the furtherance of their own selfish aims" Butler's remarks were in a of speech prepared for a caucus the Southern California Democratic executive committee Efforts to get him to identify his targets were unavailing An aide in Washington party headquarters which distributed the speech in advance told a reporter who had sought elaboration: "I reached Butler by long distance He said he didn't care to comment or elaborate He said he will stand on the speech" A story was published a month ago that a small group including former National Chairman Frank E McKinney met with former President Truman and discussed the replacement of Butler as national chairman The group also reported to have included Sen Lyndon B Johnson of Texas Senate majority leader was said to have talked of making Earle C Clements former Kentucky senator the national chairman Clements is now executive director of the Senate Democratic Campaign Committee 15 CENTS i n n Butler iFsars ' 81 99 Comal raider REDS WILL TOP US — 89 4 SECTIONS 62 PAGES 1957 in KHRUSHCHEV SAYS Winds Thwart Rescue Try On Swiss Peak Anselet New Orleans Omaha Phoenix No 211 86th YEAR 74 90 Denver Los MaxMi 94 5 70 59 68Salt la k City 97 6S 69 5 59! San Francisco 95 7 63: St loun 6$ 54 76 Seattle 79 57 65' Spokane 86 75 8TWashinsfon MaxMSn! 96 60 Poete!t 88 55 Portland (Men Finance Minister Felix Gaillard said 60 per cent of all imports now will be affected He said hs had avoided including raw and fuels which Francs imports heavily to keep her economy going so internal prices would not be forced upward Gaillard said the measures had become urgent and inevitable because of the nation's shortage cf December foreign currency Since 1955 France has run throucn about Vh billion dollars in reserves loans and advances Tha trade balances have continued to be unfavorable The deficit fcr June was 137 million dollars in Europe alone ma-teria- ls |