Show The Weather Temperatures UTAH— --Mostly clear morning 5 hot high low 55-7- 0 -OGDEN— Partly cloudy few Mi Min 95-10- thundershowers evening near 100 high low 64 84th Year No Ogden Billings Boise 100 92 103 Butte 87 Chicago Las Vegas 184 OGDEN CITY UTAH FRIDAY EVENING JULY 15 x 26 Pages 1955 90 107 Max Min I 69 Los Angeles 65 Minneapolis 69 New York 51 Salt Lake 69iSan Fran 76West Yellst 2 Sections 81 89 5 71 7 68 87 53 45 S5 99 S 5 Cents m ? r J ’? on aim 'a wf’'' f K s- - 'O 4i h it 4 4 f" President ’ v v Eisenhower told Congress today he hopes the Big Four meeting in Geneva will be able to identify the “outstanding decisive issues” troubling the ‘world and “develop methods to try to solve s r 4 exur‘&’ (AP) — WASH INGTON V Of w "’ir V ig 3 Agree On Strategy For Geneva them” £ Almost simultaneously in MosPremier Bulganin declared the Soviet delegation is leaving for next week’s Summit meeting to make a “sincere effort” to solve international problems President Eisenhower referred to the forthcoming conference in transmitting to Congress the ninth annual report on U S participation in the United Nations It covered 1954 Eisenhower takes off for Geneva tonight after telling the nation about his cautious hopes that the Big Four conference which begins Monday may lead eventually! to enduring peace In his message to Congress the President said he will enter the Big Four discussions “with a full awareness of the opportunities offered by the United Nations to contribute to the peace of the cow DANCERS READY— Shown above is one of several groups ' of dancers who will perform in All Faces West” music-dram- a From left to right: Veloy P Thompson Janet opei ing tonight f Joan Glenda Hammon Ann Knight and Choreographer Janice Shurtli Jeannine Hyde Raleigh Herrod Cashmore top-lev- 'All Faces West' Opens at Stadium Tonight Critic Says It's 'Good Enough for Broadway' By LOU GLADWELL A11 Faces West’ is the Mormon story sure — but it’s much more than tiiat It’s pioneer America- and has universal ap- ica and today he is one of America’s best salesmen” he said peal” This opinion was expressed today by Dr Clarence W Hall New York City who is writing the story of the life of Igor Gorin featured perrormer of the famed i The premiere performance will be held in Ogden stadium at 8:30 tonight It will be repeated on the outdoor stage tomorrow special and Sunday nights at the same Jime Dr Hall whose article about Gorin will appear in The Reader’s ' Digest this fall or winter watched last night’s dress rehearsal as the “All Faces West” cast put on the finishing touches “The music is haunting I can’t get it out of my mind” the writer saKL“The variety of emotions is wondmul— from the grief of the trekkers at the graveside their fun dancing and singing around the campfire the enthusiasm in conquering the wilderness” Good Enough for N Y He said he believes the Roland and Helen Parry saga of pioneer life in the west is good enough historically and musically for a successful stand on Broadway “I’ve seen productions having much less make big successes” ‘ ! i I f i he stated “‘All Faces West’ has appeal enough in its musical account of pioneer life in America but what gives it that added plus is that it is spiritually inspired” he said Dr Hall will be in the stands for each of the three performances to observe both Gorin and the pageant Officials Optimistic Stadium gates will open at 7:30 each night Officials in charge are optimistic that this year’s performance will be the best of the series because of the new music which "brings out additional features of the pioneer trek the better staging facilities and redone dancing numbers Director L Clair Likes has succeeded in- tightenig up the "continuity of the performance and taking it on to greater climaxes and stage spectacles observers feel Dr Hall explained his magazine article about Gorin will begin back in Vienna when the artist was poor but had ideals of some day coming to America “He studied everything about Amer- - Missouri Crash Kills 5 PALMYRA 4 (AP) — Five persons four of them members of an Illinois family died last night as two cars crashed on wet pavemeht lli miles north of this northeast Missouri community A sixth person is reported in critical condition at a Hannibal hospital Mo ! “All Faces West” is typical of his habit of mingling with people in “Unlike most artists from for- various parts of the country and eign countries Gorin did not con- of inspiring them to appreciate centrate his attention on Carne- America that Dr Hall has come gie Hall He preferred to go out to Ogden and mingle with the little people “That plus the fact he is alto study the true America” ways talking about the Ogden world” He dded: It is because Gorin’s' w'ork in he added smiling Open New Vistas v £4 “If these meetings reach useful ’'1 areas of agreement in the handling of international problems then they will open new vistas -'X looking toward further agreement “This can only mean that the United Nations can have new and ' ' ' S wider opportunities to build upon o the foundations thus laid” i' The President planned a informal address at 8:15 m (EDT) dealing with world p problems to be discussed at the Summit meeting opening Monday and with his views regarding steps toward their solution Radio and television networks arranged to carry the extemporar neous talk In Moscow Bulganin told a rare news conference that if the Western Big Three delegations make a sincere effort at Geneva there is “no reason to believe that the basis of a future peace cannot be assured” Bulganin received reporters inside the Kremlin He w’as accompanied by the other four major n members of the Soviet delegation to Geneva They are Communist party boss Nikita Khrushchev Soviet Foreign Minister V M Molotov Defense Minister Georgi K Zhukov a b d Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko ' Bulganin read a three-pag- e statement in Russian which then was translated into English J There was no opportunity given the 75 correspondents to ask any auestions When translation of WRITER PRESENT — Dr Clarence W Hall here to write story the statement was finished Bulganin and his delegation marched for The Reader’s Digest says Ogden musical “wonderful” v ' Globemaster With 87 Aboard (Ogden Man Included) Limps to U S From HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE Calif (AP) — A strategic Air Command Globemaster landed here last night with two engines dead after “sweating it out” for five houjrs over the fogbound Pacific Ocean j The big plane a part of the Air Force’s Operation Gyroin scope carried 87 men-feithe crew and 79 members of the 187th Regimental Combat Team (airborne) who are beihg transferred back to the United States j by air from Japan Ogdenite Was Aboard Among the men abpard was Pfc James Mathews1 Ogden Field Hawaii early yesterday was due at Travis Air Force Base Suisun Calif at 9:41 pm (MST) last night It finally landed here five hours late escorted by all available rescue air craft in the Pacific Coast The long ordeal began at 4 pm when the oil line on one of the starboard engines of the transport blew out The engine lost so much oil it had to be cut out and the propeller feathered i ght '( Utah “We were about 10 minutes past the point of equal time (Air Force language meaning the midway point of no return) when the first engine went” said Lt Richard E Davidson ‘ 1 The plane which left Hickam Vu i One Set a Record i Winds to Decide Yacht Race HONOLULU (UP)i — T h e trade winds held the lanswer t? the Transpacific Yachi Race today If they continue ta diminish the schooner Constellation appeared a cinch to be the winner of the 2225:mile race W'ith a corrected time of 9 days 3 hours 10 minutes and 20 seconds j But if they increase they could put the Class C Nalu II in excellent position io take top honors in the classic The Nalu w7ith nearly a handicap was le£s than 400 miles from the Diamond Head inrt1ri'liii'7T tn m—fi i out 75-fo- 100 Yesterday Same Today? ah j ! us ! I finish line at last reports She appeared to be the only boat threatening the tConstellation The Nalu II is owned by Peter Grant of Newport Harbor Yacht Club The Constellation ot 74-ho- ur j Frank Hooy-Kaa- s owned by of the! Los An- geles Yacht Club was one of the Class A yachts to finish the race First across the line early yesterday was Richard S Rheem’s ketch Morning Star which set a new record for the crossing of 9 days 15 hours 5 minutes and 10 seconds Her corrected time was 9 days 9 hours 30 minutes and 22 seconds 96-fo- ot ! y “Isseriior to? I ! I i ee Names in the News Nehru's Bodyguard Has His Pocket Picked Prime Minister Nehru of India had a costly homecoming at New Delhi yesterday Just before the plane bringing him from his European tour landed he gave $27 to a bodyguard to hold In the crowd that swarmed around the plane the money-holdinbodyguard fell victim to a pickpocket Miss Sally Booth a teacher at Elgin Air Force Base Fla is engaged to marry Milton Stover Eisenhower Jr nephew of President Eisenhower according to announcement by her parents today She is now visiting in Germany Screen actress Ilona Massey 44 and Donald Sheldon Dawson 47 former aide of Truman left El Paso Tex yesterday for the West Coast g nt tw?o-ho- ur i “Everybody was extremely calm “I was pretty sure we’d have to ditch Those paratrooper felt I guess they could cope with whatever came up” Capt Earl Roberts of St Louis Mo was pilot of the plane with 2nd Lt Harry Simpson of Akron Ohio as The pilot reported that when the engines went out the plane lost altitude rapidly but when it settled down to heavier air near the ocean it was able to maintain altitude on the two remaining engines Throw Gear Overboard The homebound paratroopers had to throw overboard all their collected gear and souvenirs over as many as five years in Japan They landed with just the fatigue uniforms they wore co-pil- ot and their rifles The jettison operation ordered by Roosevelt took 7000 pounds of load out of the Firemen Spray Bridge to Break R I Traffic Jam -- i 15-ac- re A tor Capt' Theodore Roosevelt a distant relative of both the late Presidents Theodore and Franklin D Roosevelt was commander of the plane The Elyria Ohio officer drew high praise from the passengers and crewmen for his cool handling of the operation Roosevelt said that the two remaining engines had been running at top capacity for the last part of the trip and were “beginning to act up” “Running on Fumes” “I was deeply concerned that the magnetos might go” he said “I was surely glad to get 'down for we were running on fumes as far as fuel was concerned plane Because of the strain of the lopsided landing both tires on the right side of the plane were blown out in the landing and it was left sitting at the end of a runway until a towbar and tires could be brought over from Travis The Globemaster was 750 miles offshore when it first reported its trouble The 41st Air Rescue Squadron immediately sent out one of its Gruman Albatross air rescue amphibians and when the second engine went out all five planes of the Fourth Air Rescue Group were dispatched two more from this base and one each from March and McChord bases I 107-degr- Alliance Ohio assistant naviga- I j j Mid-Pacif- ic i 10-ma- is-Ut- Secretary Dulles Arrives in Paris j v'- Discuss Points at Issue Bulganin said in his state- ment: “We go to Geneva prepared to in St George 102 in Delta Mil- - discuss frankly the points at achieve a relaxation of and Idaho continued to j ford and Green River and 106 ?ue swelter in temperatures at Hanksville and 99 in Salt Lake today with mercury setting an City and 95 in Provo even 100 degrees here yesterday Northern Idaho temperatures is peace Two world wars brought 12 30 todXXxpectedgtro reach ‘oda’ were exPeded t0 range Slih wLnJd’ between 88 and 98 around 100 degree again - !hf cr "hing cost5 worfe m Minimum here early today was The Weather Bureau says a ments race an(j rGat fear 69 degrees and low tonight wUl cold trough off the Pacific Coast can breathe freelv peODje be around 58 degrees and high can be expected to move inland tomorrow will be pear 100 de-- toward the lntermountain area anjf their children are not threat a cheduied’ to Skies will be mostly clear with be was question today a few afternoon showers along in Idaho tak 0jf f Highest temperatures the mountains Therfive-dafore- - yesterday were identical 103s at n nWFnT'i ahnaJPVie cast for Utah- - calls for temper-- ! Boise and Lewiston It was 99 in 3t 930 plane Columbine atures averaging near normal and Gooding 98 in Malad 97 in personal His will include Mrs Eisenparty scattered showers over the week- Burley Idaho Falls and Pocatello hower son Army Maj and their 94 in Salmon 93 in Dubois and end Eisenhower John who will serve 90 in Grangeville Some of last as It Was 107 at St George to an aide his father night’s lows included 69 degrees Utah’s hottest temperature yes- in Boise and Lewiston 54 in Ida- Make One Step terday was a reading ho Falls and 56 in Pocatello The plane will make one refueling stop — at Keflavik Air Base a U S Air Force installation in Iceland The President is due there at 11 a m Iceland time 5 a m (MST) During a stopover he and the First Lady will be luncheon guests of President Assgeir Ass- of Iceland after being married at Juarez Mrs Catherine Kreitzer the geirsson Eisenhower whose planned Mexico Bible expert who took $32000 course is the North Atlantic last Tuesday in the $64000 great circle route is due to arKeiko Awaji Japanese film actress who appeared in “The will get rive at Gerieva at 8 p m toQuestion program Bridges of Toko Ri” suffered $2500 more for a Toast of the morrow Along the way his plane will minor facial cuts in Yokahoma Town appearance Sunday and be a shepherded by an unspecified car in which next fall will be back to do Japan when of Air Force B29s and number she was riding hit a parked Bible readings for Ed Sullivan ' AS16 amphibious planes and by truck from the King James Version nine Navy weather ships staPresident Eisenhower in GenStage and screen actress tioned at intervals of about 400 eva will worship Sunday in a Gladys George who died last miles little gray stone church that On arrival at Geneva the Dec 8 left an estate worth no stands near a gambling casino more than $500 a Hollywood President will motor to the He accepted an invitation to atcourt petition for letters of adgrounds of the Chateau de tend the Episcopal American ministration disclosed Miss Cruex de Genthod the rented Church which is used by all George formerly lived in Salt villa at which he and the First Protestant denominations Lake City Lady will stay during the Big Four conference Plucky actress Suzan Ball Actress Susan Hayward startwho is fighting her second bated court action today to take tle against cancer in Hollywood Reds Ban Nude Bathing custody of her twin sons Timwas reported “resting comfortand 11 othy BERLIN (AP) — Communist Gregory away ably” today but still in a critical from their father actor Jess authorities have banned nude condition at the City of Hope Barker during August in Los bathing on the Baltic beaches Sanitarium Angeles East German newspapers report In slightly less than three U S Secretary of State John Foster Dulles British Foreign Secretary Harold Macmillan and French Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay endorsed a detailed draft of- - Western conference plans These include a definite list of topics the West will raise and the stand it will take on hours U S Ambassador Douglas Dillon (left) and Rene Massigli of the French foreign ministry are on hand to greet Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on the American diplomat’s arrival yesterDulles is planning strategy in preparation for next week’s Big Fpur day at Orly Field Paris ’ meeting at Geneva te 90-pl- Western Big Three foreign ministers agreed quickly today on their position and strategy for the historic Geneva meeting with Russia’s top political and military leaders ! el music-drama- ” music-dram- a By JOSEPH E DYNAN PARIS (AP)— --The First Across the Finish Line Sails billowing the ketch “Morning Star” owned by Richard S Rheem of Lbs Angeles Yacht Club leaves a boiling wake in its stretch run to a record victory in the San Pedro Calif to Honolulu yacht race The yacht crossed the Diamond Head finish line at 12:05 la m yesterday in 9 days 15 hours 5 minutes and 10 seconds The above picture was made by the Air Force race shortly1 before end of the 2225-mil-e j 98-fo- ot PROVIDENCE R I (AP) Fire fighters used hoses and hundreds of gallons of water yesterday to break up a traffic jam at the approaches to Point Street Bridge The bridge was opened to permit passage of a tugboat and when tenders tried to lower the draw spans they found that the heat had expanded the steel and the bridge refused to close Fire fighters played hoses on the metal and — after an hour and 20 minutes delay that backed up traffic four blocks —the bridge cooled and the draw spans slid into place each issue The list was submitted to the ministers by diplomatic experts from each delegation yesterday The ministers convened in the French Foreign Ministry from about 10:40 am until almost 1 pm when Pinay told corres- pondents their work was com- pleted Pinay did not disclose what subjects the West intends to bring up at Geneva but they were almost certain to include German reunification European disarmament security and French Premier Edgar Faure’s p new scheme to help backward areas Pinay said he- and the two other ministers had discussed Faure’s plan and added “We’ve all had that general idea for some time” He cited a statement of President Eisenhower along the same general lines The documents approved today will be submitted to the Western chief of government in Geneva Sunday morning Pinay said Eisenhower Faure and British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden will meet there with their foreign ministers as a curtain raiser to the sessions with the Kremlin’s bosses on Monday The Russians have not tipped their hand except for a statement by the Soviet news agency Tass this week asserting that the Paris treaties to rearm West Germany made a discussion of reunification of subordinate importance The Tass statement proposed creation of an security' system with West and East Germany both members and in which they could work together toward reunification disarm-and-develo- - all-Europe- an Learns Dad Is Stepfather Boy Kills Himself LAS VEGAS Nev (AP) — A search for four-da- y ld John Cooley ended at a body a 22 caliber rifle and three small notebook pages scrawled with the boy’s hitter sun-scorch- ed farewell Sheriff W E Leypold said the er he learned that Cooley —whom he thoughtAvery was his father — was really his stepfather The air and ground search by more than 200 men ended yes- terday beside a dirt road within sight of Las Vegas boy apparently killed himself aft- Officials said the body had been lying by the road less than 36 hours The search began after he failed to return home Monday from a bicycle ride He apparently was still alive when posses were scouring the desert for him Deputies said he may have watched them from a hiding place as they passed Part of the note found by the body concerned family strictness It was signed “John Cooley or Beasley — which is it to be?” Deputies were unable to explain the “Beasley” reference INDEX Joseph Alsop Dr William Brady Comics Community Pages Dr Crane Obituaries Gallup Poll Drew Pearson Radio-T- V SA $A 4B 5B 11A 12A 10A 6B 6A 6A 5B Programs Sport 2B 3B Theater Page 14A 10 20 and 50 Years Ago 6A Vital Statistics 6B A1 Warden Women’s Pages 2B 9 A 10A -- |