| Show x fcca The Veather UTAH— Fair warmer high low 35-4- 8 63-7- 3 i OGDEN— Fair low 4542 and high 70 OGDEN CITY UTAH 117 No 84th Yaar MONDAY EVENING Temperature 5 Boise Butte Chlcase Las Vefll MAY 9 1955 WASHINGTON —— — A Rescue squads pulled most of the trapped men out of the debris but two still were listed as missing Eight “badly injured”! men were removed to Roosevelt Hospital after the collapse Rescue officials said that subsidiary steel forming abou three stories above ground gave way sending a great mass of building materials and metal cascading on workers The area gave the appearance of a bombing raid as many of the horde of construction men ran shouting hysterically The Coliseum planned as a great convention and exposition center is being erected at Columbus Circle and is to cover a area j The police disaster squad fire equipment and ambulances were hurried to the scene' PARIS (AP)— The Big Three foreign ministers today waited word from President Eisenhower on a proposal for a meeting “at the summit” with Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin in Switzerland next July Spokesmen for the Briti$h who with the French have beed pressing for top level meeting said last night Secretary of State Dulles has promised to ask Mr Eisenhower for an answer Ion the proposal within 48 hours House Postal Raisd L WASHINGTON (UP) The House today ignored the threat of a presidential veto and apbill to boost proved of 500000 pay postal workers an average of 88 per cent Tht measure was approved by a vote of 328 to 66 or $ votes more than would be necessary to override a presidential veto The Senate is expected to approve the measure Wednesday and send it to the White House It represents a compromise be- tween an 82 per cent increase voted earlier by the House and 10 per cent approved eajrlier by the Senate — are being counted and 24 4S 5 Cents 4 s polio vaccine in the mass only a comparatively few clinics in Weber County 4 f S' ktt t plant-by-pla- nt Blood Replaced Twice 1 X -- 1 f U 2 d rj r Ogden Man ¥ 4' - O' T - V-- - hV V ? A ’ Struck Dies ld f r Cv Truck Going! Gone! Flames burst from the cab of a tractor-traile- r (upper) In Fredonia moments of Angola N Y Cain Y N after the driver William shows (lower) as flames escaped uninjured Only the front wheel vehicle Gasoline entire the dripping on a hot exhaust envelop of blaze was The vehicle on its way” the cause the apparent pipe to Cleveland was loaded with empty beer bottles lot-by-l- ot Plane Crash Kills 2 in S Last Atomic Test Due Wednesday Demo to Probe Polio 'Confusion' 30-degr- ee Bulletin ot 500-000-m- an Kleberg Manager of Texas' Famed King Ranch Dies at 68 KINGSVILLE Tex (AP) — Richard M Kleberg Sr cowboy and congressman was a Texan in the grand manner a giant in the storied tradition of the ranch country He died yesterday at 68 in Hot Springs Ark a victim of a heart attack Kleberg was chairman of the board of the 1250000-acr- e King Ranch an empire of cattle and horses oil and cotton ' He was a grandson of Richard King the founder Even casual acquaintances called him “Mr Dick” charmed bird dogs worked with thor- manner democratic his easy by oughbred horse development and A tall dark-hairestriking man brought the King Ranch stables he loved a crowd and the crowd the top of the racing world usually came to “Mr Dick” his with such horses as Assault and friends said “He was an able man” said Stymie Richard wrote some of the John E Lyle today “a good man a gentleman He served his coun- early New Deal farm legislation try well” It was Lyle who un- and sponsored it through Conseated Kleberg in 1944 after the gress He was a leader in cotton and cattle organizations and was latter’s 13 years in Congress Robdevotee of wildlife conservaKleberg and his brother nato tion and ert expanded brought tional prominence the big ranch Although he went to Congress of cattle staunch supporter of Franklin breeds They developed Roosevelt and the New Deal J d Dilemma in Tariff Bill Fight: Two Towns Reflect Good and Bad Aspects U S Faces Adlai Stevenson paid a brief visit to Leopoldville Belgian Congo yesterday hen went on to Accra for a fpur-da-y visit to the Gold Coast The 1952 Democratic presidential candidate said he had noticed that some progress has been made in the racial field in several territories Orson x Welles 40 one-tim- e boy wonder of the American theater honeymdoned today with! his new bride He and dark-haireCountess di Girfal-c- o 24 an Italian starlet better know: as Paoula Mori were d married yesterday - J President David O McKay of Saints Church the Latter-daand his wife arrived in Washvisit ington today for a two-daThe McKays were met by Mrs Ezra Taft Benson wife of the Secretary of Agriculture president J Willard Marriott of the Washington LDS stake and a grandson Russell M Blood Sen Arthur V Watkins will meet with the church president during the Washington stay The McKays will return to Salt Lake City tomorrow night On Friday President McKay will meet with Prince Tungi of the Tonga Islands y y French movie actor Jean Pierre Aumont left Cannes France today for Paris leaving behind actress Grace Kelley whom he described as “an adorable and sensational woman any man would be proud and pleased to marry” “She is a wonderful woman But whethI adore her er the feelings are reciprocal is up to her to say” They have been constant companions for several days of the Cannes Film Festival and Aumont made no secret of his romantic attentions Financial circles reported Avery had planned to retire as chairman some time ago but that when Wolfson New York i i Doris Williams was granted a divorce today from the former Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams but the judge put off his decision on the financial settlement Mrs Williams an attractive woman said she and her husband of 10 years “just couldn’t get along Ted just didn’t seem to want to be dark-haire- I Rnb jo suspended vaccination programs among younger school children Under the plan U S Public Health Service inspectors making a safety check will telephone Surgeon General Leonard Scheele as soon as they determine that any specific batch of vaccine has passed its test The manufacturer will be authorized to send word to doctors public health authorities or others who have some of this vaccine that it may be used Germany as 15th Member tabu- and Florida financier made public his plan to seek control of the firm Avery stayed on to lead the management fight Avery had headed the firm second only to Sears Roebuck it Co in the mail order and retail field since 1931 when J P Morgan & Co put him in control to save the concern fromN going under in the de- pression During Avery’s regime four jWard presidents and about 40 vice presidents had been fired 1 Since officials anticipate clearance for the bulk of the vaccine now “frozen” this points toward early resumption of temporarily Greets NATO lated " 44 44 (AP) — local supervisor of public nursing for the State Health Department 1088 youngsters received their shots in five of six local schools while about 55 were withdrawn from the program Reports from Lorin Farr School were de- layed The immunization program resumed here today after Dr Louis P Gebhardt University of Utah bacteriologist who has been conducing vaccine tests since April Scheele’s decision to recom27 told state health officials and mend suspension of vaccination the Utah State Medical Assn yesprograms pending further checks to was shown vaccine the on the safety of the lots of vacterday cine already manufactured came be safe after long study of the situation PARIS (AP)— The North At- Will Be Completed by a committee of technical exlantic Council welcomed West The first series of shots in perts Three-day-ol- d daughter of Mrs Nadine Robertson of Belmont1 Germany today as its 15th mem- this area will be completed to- He Believes It Safe Calif (bottom)! showed steady improvement today after her blood ber in the Western alliance morrow when inoculations will Scheele stressed: supply was twice replaced Mrs Nadine Robertson of Belmont 1 He believes the vaccine In Calif the mother is shown chatting with nurse Ethel Sieben against the threat of Communist be given at 9 am at the followis safe and effective schools: blood RH The aggression factor ing the general endangered (top) parents incompatible 2 Parents whose children have Burch Creek Madison Horace child’s life The infant is not completely out of danger Chancellor Konrad Adenauer cause took his place at the NATO Coun- Mann Lewis Lakeview Wilson been vaccinated “have no of the and Wasatch for alarm” in the judgment cil table for the first time in a Second shots in all Weber Public Health Service Scheele said he expected that public session in the Palais de County and Ogden schools will vaccine of arrival await further Chaillot The NATO supplies sQme of the held-u- p top group S L immediate of would be vaccine for released three-da- y certified in a session opened Meanwhile although many oth- use late this week problems of Western European er school districts Most states seemed disposed are defense and other issues of global to resume administrationexpected to follow Scheele’s recommendaof first SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — shots Lake week this tion Salt City A man identified as John import What’s a monkey island in a On the basis that Scheele had Ger- according to an earlier announceWest For the Mertz 49 who had1 been living ment won’t zoo without monkeys? ahead the with done go nothing more than recomthe ceremony at 2518 Lincoln Ave died about man statesman 16 until mend program suspension of vaccinations May Salt Lake City youngsters 2:12 am of head injuries marked a culminating stage in officials Idaho said health today Utah and Michigan health authat ponder this question after see- received last night during a fight his long and difficult campaign state’s mass inoculation program thorities decided to go ahead with ing the empty island at Hogle in front of the Silver Dollar Bar to enroll his countrymen as an will not be resumed until federal their program to the extent that vac- vaccine was available ' Canada Zoological Gardens But they 2122 Reeves Ave Death apparent- equal partner in the ranks of the officials have inspected the was caused by a skull fracture basis-cine on a also Is going ahead with its mass perk up considerably when ly Albert Gentile of the free world democracies manager inoculation they find out why there aren’t tavern told police that a Negro Adenauer’s place at the Counj any monkeys Only 52 Get Polio dressed in a brown tweed cil table allotted by alphabetical The zoo rents monkeys for nattily coat and brown shirt Scheele’s announcement includwas between France and the summer because it has no sport smashed the white man on the order a report that the number of ed Greece winter quarters for the animals with his victim fist and the jaw children developing polio after But this year sol many of the fell to the sidewalk hitting his 10 years ago both counOnly had risen to 52 with vaccination L Rhesus monkeys from India — head hard from the 50 of the cases paralvtic The surdelivered were tries the kind which always have The Victim identified a Nazi invaders who had geon general said 44 of the chilravaged inhabited the island— are being name — John Mertz —typed by on a dren had been inoculated with — SALT LAKE CITY (AP) used in the manufacture of the pill box died at the Dee Hospital them during World War II from the Cutter Laboravaccine Two Salt men were Lake City Salk polio vaccine that none without regaining consciousness “We have been working with killed last of tories Berkeley Calif before night in the crash of are available for the zoo A passerby Darrell Stark 211 Germans for four years trying to a Cutter’s output was recalled light plane approaching the When the kids learn the is- W Oak St told officers he had 27 the April European army Municipal Airport land is empty sp youngsters seen the Negro assailant before bring about The victims were Rollie R will have a better chance to but that he did not know his program” one delegate explained 30 the pilot and owner escape polio they don’t seem name He appeared to be about “So meeting them in the corri- Wagstaff of the 1 plane and David C Deel-str- a to mind at all 31 years old dors and councils of NATO will 25 Detectives V R Butcher and no real change” Witnesses said the plane apJohn G Pincock today were at- bring to be making a normal levels lower the On the peared tempting to positively identify was somewhat different picture to the landing strip One LAS VEGAS (UP) — The approach the dead man and to locate the Atomic Energy Commission today to a British when it suddenly went into a French secretary Negro dive and smashed to the postponed the 14th and final NATO official said she would be to the German delegates ground about four blocks short of nuclear detonation of its spring polite VANCOUVER Bj C (UP)— tests at least until Wednesday more “The Gestapo tor- the airport nothing Chairman Warren G Magnuson A Marine veteran flier because of unfavorable weather he father” killed and tured Corps my (DWash) said today his Senate W Hill one of those who conditions said Eugene Interstate Commerce Committee saw the crash said the pilot aptower shot equivThe 500-fowould conduct hearings early WASHINGTON (AP) — The Not Ready Until ’59 too to tons of TNT had 30000 banked then alent steeply parently next week on the “1Imuddled con United States plans to set off ex- could not regain control of the been scheduled do not Germans The West tentatively for fusion” of the Salk vaccine pro- - an underwater atomic explosion ‘which was flying at about tomorrow morning It originally have their projected to plane pect within a few days gram was set for last Friday defense force trained for 600 feet atomic war until 1959 But when the Germans are ready Allied military leaders think the West’s combined forces can reasonably hope to beat back any Russian at- Sewell Avery Quits as Montgomery Ward Boss J — The recent confusion over use of Salk inoculation of school children resulted in parents withdrawing their children from and Ogden City schools today According to Miss LaVerna Peterson Names in the News Sewell L Avery 81 resigned today as chairman of Montgomery Ward and Co along with the firm’s president who helped fight off Louis ij Wolf-son’- s drive to capture jcontrol of the mail order housei Edmund A Krider 4 2 Ward president who trouped the country to line up shareholders ’ behind the Avery management resigned and pledged “my full suport” to John A Barr 47 who was named toy Succeed Avery as chairman of the board anL chairman of tive Committee No successor to Kric er was named Avery will remain a director of ithe company He is one of ' the candidates on the manage-- 1 ment slate of directors for re election Votes taken at the stockholders’ meeting April 22 — After Utah OKs Vaccine Monkey Island Is Bare in But Cause Is OK Big 3 Await lice's Word ’ 44 44 stage-by-stag- Polio Shots Are Resumed -the huge center section New York Coliseum Build ing binder construction col lapsed today Police said about 40 workmen were trapped beneath cascading tons of steelj concrete and wood two-bloc- k 47 13 74 71 The government set up mae chinery today for quick release of polio vaccine cleared for use under new safety checks Few Parents Object — Concrete and Wood Collapse f- MlnneapoUs New York so 23 Salt Lake 17 40 Saa Fraa 49 SljWest Yellst 34 ten t (AP) Anrtln (SSOGIKl Tons of Steel NEW YORK 34 Lea M l i 73 43 MuS3Min34 I 39 18 Pages 2 Sections As Buildjncj Falls in N Y ' Min U BUUBga 40 Trapped ' Mu Or den Sewell L Avery d married” tack Limits for the German force West set by the new include Union (WEU) European a army of 350000 men a tactical air force and a small coastal defense navy The United States will provide the force’s first tanks and other equipment The Americans are said to have stockpiled 700 million dollars worth of modern weapons in West Germany for German military this purpose men estimate they will need up to three billion dollars worth of American equipment seven-natio- n 1300-plan- e PADEN CITY W Va (AP) — The vital complex fight over the nation's tariff laws gets down to bread and butter terms in two different kinds of signs you see along the Ohio River these days Along the river highway outside of Paden City there’s a sign advertising 80000 square feet of factory space for sale or lease This is the spitaph of a old glass company which gave up four years ago because of e Japanese competition in table' glassware About 450 of the town’s 2500 people lost their 40-ye- ar low-wag- Brodie Twin Shows Some Improvement CHICAGO (UP)— The world’s most famous Siamese twin Rodney Dee Brodie appeared to be fighting his way back from death today The youngster came out of a to coma and seemed recognize his parents on Moth- 55-ho- ur er’s Day But his condition was still critical Doctors hoped a hemorrhage in his brain has stopped They held out little hope for his survival if it doesn’t Rodney Dee was separated Siamese from his head-joine- d twin brother Roger Lee in a history-making operation on Dec 17 jobs Now follow the same river west around the southern bulge of Ohio until you reach Evansville Ind Here you see help wanted signs Here the town is booming partially because of foreign trader Stakes in Tariff Fight The two kinds of signs reflect many of the grass roots stakes in the fight now ending in Washington Last week the Senate passed the bill empowering President Eisenhower to cut US tariffs to spur world commerce This week the Senate and House try to agree in conference on a final bill Behind these last efforts stretches a long complibasic cated debate involving dilemmas such as these: If friendly foreign nations are to improve their economies and thus become less vulnerable to communism they will have to sell us more But if they sell more here some US industries will sell less How do you protect or help those industries? In a generally healthy national economy some “sick’’ US indus- - tries have been made sicker by foreign competition How if you reduce tariffs further do you avoid making the illness fatal? Economy Is Helped More If we’re going to sell more abroad foreigners will have to get the purchasing power by selling more here But while various surveys show that the American economy is helped more by increasing foreign buying here than it is hurt by foreign selling here that still doesn’t make the wounded minority feel any better What can be done for them? These are the broad outlines of the problem To understand it in human terms let’s return to the signs along the Ohio River In Paden City the sign for the New Series Starts 1952 Roger Lee never recovered consciousness after the operation and died 34 days later But his brother thrived despite 19 subse quent dperations and the lack of a permanent covering for his brain Last week however the little boy became sluggish and he was brought to the hospital here What About Tariffs? This is the first in a series of fjve articles which The Standard-Examine- r will publish covering the pros and cons of the fight over the nation’s tariff laws This one concerns the human elements involved defunct glass works is symptomatic of the troubles plaguing many of the glassware and pottery factories in this northernmost corner of West Virginia Some have shut down completely Others are part-tim- e Unemployworking ment has been running from 8 to 14 per cent in this part of the state The U S Potters Assn once had 43 members Now it has 31 of which 23 make earthernware the rest china The 23 earned a total of $4150000 in 1947 Last year largely because of foreign competition they had a combined loss of $1100000 Picture Brightens But the picture brightens as you go west on the Ohio River Let’s stop at Evansville and In diana’s 8th Congressional District represented by Winfield K Denton Denton voted for the administration bill evidently echoing the sentiments of most of his constituents A foreign trade case sjudy was made here at the request o' members of Congress by the legislative reference service o the Library of Congress The sur- vey showed: About 10000 of Denton’s con stituents work for Servel Inc at Evansville If Servel exports to the same extent other US refrigerator producers do 130( can be said to owe their jobs to he supported Republican presidential candidates after the Supreme Court controversy and TDR’s third-terbid Mentioned as Ambassador m command Kleberg’s of Span-s- h and its ranch and border dialects endeared him to his n employes and to Mexicans generally Several times ic was mentioned as possible ambassador to one Central Amer-ca-n nation or another He raced cowhorses and thoroughbreds on the great ranch before World War I He became in the family tradition an expert marksman horseman and at an early age and until past middle life was an active rodeo participant He roped' and rode with the best King Ranch vaqueros He loved and sought competition but the failing heart which finally ended his career yesterday had curtailed his activities in recent years He was stricken in a Hot Springs hotel where he fiequently vacationed The body was returned here yesterday in his private plane in which he had flown to Hot Springs Friday Survivors include his widow a brother two sisters and his son Robert Jr Latin-America- out-doorsm- an INDEX 6A 7A Joseph Alsop Dr William Brady Comics Dr Crane 2B SB Editorial Page J A Livingston Obituaries foreign trade Drew Pearson About 2500 work in auto anc Radio-TPrograms auto parts firms Export sales 8A account for 5 per cent of passenSports ger cars and 15 per cent of 10 20 and 50 Years Ago trucks Another 1100 work for Theater Page Mead Johnson it Co which ex- Vital Statistics ports 10 per cent of its output of vitamins and baby formula prod- A1 Warden Women’s Page ucts V 7A CA A 3B GA SB 9A 6A 4B SB 8A 7A |