7 Butte Weather Mostly cloudy today, Saturday, occasional light' rain Saturday. Expected today, '45; tonight, 28. Expected high Saturday, 48. Thursday: 47; 30; .10. signs a.
Montana' highway accidents this year "I I Was the traffic toll a year Mm I iT ago this date. C1OU0Y Vol. LXXXI I No. 86 Established 1876 Butte-Anaconda, Montana, Friday Morning, October 25, 1957 Price 5 Cents Dulles Points Out Something of Interest to Macmillan ct to Greats Missiles, 'Atomic Partnership Itejo Stolid Resp66t Ike, Macmillan A U. S.
Hurling Aloft Virtual Fusilade Of Mighty Missiles Scientific Resources To be Pooled to Meet Red Offensive By JOHN SCALI I Latin America to help mobilize WASHINGTON WJ President; the assets of all democracies in Eisenhower and Prime Minister the cold war struggle. Macmillan met for 2V4 hours, A tight secrecy curtain around Thursday night to chart combined, the talks was lifted long enough American-British action in devel-j earlier in tne day to disclose an opment of new atomic and mis- Eisenhower-Macmillan order to day night these new ft- 0 I NX '1 1 i i AFL-CI0 Vote Suspension Of Teamsters WASHINGTON The AFL-CIO Executive Council Thursday suspended the Teamsters Union until James R. Hoffa and other allegedly corrupt officials are ousted from the truckers union. The suspension was announced by AFL-CIO President George Meany who said the Teamsters, largest AFL-CIO unit, had failed to rid itself, of corruption. Meany said the vote for suspension was 25 to 4.
He declined to name the dissenters. However, it was learned those voting against suspending the Teamsters were council members John F. English, secretary-treasurer of the Teamsters; Maurice Hutcheson, Carpenters Union president; Herman Winters, former Bakery Workers president, and William Doherty, Letter Carriers Union president. Doherty was reported to have felt more time should have been given the Teamsters for a cleanup. The Teamsters would have had to have 10 votes in order to block draw up immediate plans for a pooling of British-American atom British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, right, looks interested as Secretary of State John Foster Dulles points out something of interest in Washington.
Dulles was on hand to greet the prime minister as he arrived from London for important discussions 'with President Eisenhower and his cabinet members. Thursday President Eisenhower and Macmillan issued a statement that the United States and Britain would pool their scientific resources to meet Russia's challenge. Nine More Highway Jobs Awarded on Low Bids' Totaling $1,941,763 two-lane facilities. A department spokesman added that it also is the first step in a long-range program to improve the traffic facilities in the same general area. The awards by the Montana Highway Commission brought the year's total highway awards to $18,866,340 for 87 projects.
It was the commission's eighth bid opening of the year. The record for a full year was set in 1956 when 107 contracts were awarded for a total of The 1955 total for 105 contracts was $19,368,871. One, project to rebuild almost 12 miles of' TT. S. Highway 10 between Livingston and Big Timber, 'By ELTON C.
FAY WASHINGTON The United States is hurling aloft a virtual fusillade of mighty missiles and rockets, ranging from a record-shattering shoot into outer space to spectacular destruction by a robot weapon of a target plane a hundred miles out over the Atlantic Ocean. In obvious challenge to Russia's claims of leadership in the race of scientists and weaponeers, this country had chalked up by Thurs- Rumors Have It Benson Slated For Another Job By OVID A. MARTIN WASHINGTON un Will Sec retary of Agriculture Benson be the fourth member of the Eisen hower Cabinet to leave office in 1957? question was being asked in government and farm circles Thursday in the wake of Atty. Gen. Brownell's resignation and.
Benson's departure Tuesday on a round-the-world trip to check up on U.S. farm surplus disposal operations abroad. Even before these two events, reports were circulating partic ularly in the Agriculture Dept. that Benson will be moved from his Cabinet post to another job. The reports were that Benson would go to i the White House where he would serve as an assistant to the President on a broadened farm surplus disposal program.
His world trip ties into such speculation. But Benson aides declare there is no truth to the reports. They say that the White House has made plans for Benson, in the capacity of secretary of agriculture, that carry well into February. Benson himself said recently that ne has no plans to resign. Thursday in Honolulu, on world tour looking into the U.
S. farm export program, Benson reiterated he has no plans to leave the Eisenhower Cabinet. He said he would stay on in the Cabinet "indefinitely" because Eisenhower asked him to remain. Benson leaves Honolulu Friday ior lokyo. The collapse of many previous forecasts of his resignation would appear to lend weight to the pros pect of Benson continuing indefi' nitely as farm secretary.
Benson has been under fire from some farm organizations, and from some farm leaders of his own as well as of the Democratic party, since shortly after he took office in 1953 and outlined policies calling for reduced government aid to farmers. A number of times. Republican farm state Congress members have called on Eisenhower to re move Benson. But Eisenhower has always responded with a warm endorsem*nt of his farm chief. Yet perhaps at no time in Ben son's tenure has criticism of his policies been so widespread as it is today.
Wednesday with his longtime friend, Leo "Lynn, and her friend, Mrs. Guilbert Banks. They attended the wedding couple. Bing told his plans to Msgr. Ryan, request-( Continued Page 6, Col.
5) MRS. BING CROSBY 4. 1. The launching of two research rockets by the Air Force from balloons. One of these seems to have swooshed straight up to not less than 1,000 miles.
This height dwarfs the previous farthest-out record. The Army's Jupiter ex perimental device, not of weapon design, was unofficially reported to have gone about 3,000 miles and climbed to an altitude of more than 600 miles a year ago. Russia's Sputnik satellite was put into orbit at a reported altitude of 560 miles. The Air Force emphasized the rocket shoots in its "Operation Far Side," made from balloons floating 100,000 feet "over Eniewetok Atoll in the Pacific, were not in tended to put an object into orbit but merely to make scientific soundings of the vast ocean of space straight up. 2.
The firing of an Air Force Bomarc long range antiaircraft guided missile Wednesday from the Cape Canaveral, Missile Test Center which ferreted out, collided with and knocked down (without benefit of warhead) a drone bomber a hundred miles out over the Atlantic Ocean. The automatic warning device built into the Bomarc weapon system, built by Boeing Airplane put the target-hunting missile into the air (Continued Page 6, Col. 2) Kidnaper Kills Woman, Slashes Pastor NEW ORLEANS W) A 57-year old church secretary was slashed to death and a pastor slashed bound and gagged Thursday by a dark-skinned 'man who kidnaped them and demanded money for his sick son. The kidnaping occurred as the 69-year-old pastor prepared to take his secretary to her home after a night service at their Canal Street church in the mid-city section, The Rev. Martin W.
H. Holls told officers the man slid into the front. seat by Miss Maud" Lind as they got into his new car, a gift of the congregation of St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church He pointed a gun at Miss Lind and ordered Holls to drive Where I tell you." A three-hour terror ride through the nearby City Park section fol lowed. It ended only four blocks from the church where the kid naping occurred.
The church work er was tortured and her throat slashed. The pastor, his throat cut and head beaten, attracted the atten tion of nearby residents by press ing his car horn with his foot. After treatment in a hospital, Holls asked and received police protection from the killer. He said the man apparently left the parked car believing he was dead. Holls said after he drove about 20 minutes the bandit made him stop the car.
He pointed the gun at Holls and demanded his money. "I hate to do this to you." he said, "but I need money. My lit tle boy is sick. My family comes first." Holls surrendered seven one dol lar bills from his wallet. The man forced Miss Lind into the back seat and made her remove her stockings.
He used the stockings to bind and gag Holls, then demanded the secretary's purse and diamond ring. He emp tied the purse and took the ring despite Miss Lind pleading. Later, the bandit stopped the car again, killed Miss Lind slashed the minister across throat and beat him. Then man fled. and the the 2 Killed, 200 Hurt In French Strike PARIS UPi Two shipyard strik ers were killed and 200 injured in a destructive clash with authori ties at St.
Nazaire Thursday on the eve of a nationwide 24-hour walkout by many unions. They are protesting high living costs. At Nantes, several hundred striking metal workers hurled stones and iron" bolts at police in a flare-up symptomatic of labor tension in this country without a government. The striken at St. Nazaire were angered by a management lockout after almost a month of rotating wildcat work stoppages.
They, smashed nearly every front window in the huge shipyard company's i main office, ransacked offices and overturned a police van. Police reinforcements finally restored order. was removed from Thursday's let ting. This project, however, may De let in November. The projects and successful bidders, by county: Yellowstone Construct a steel and concrete overpass over the Northern Pacific Railway on the Laurel-Billings road, just west of Billings limits, project to be completed by Oct.
31, 1959. W. R. Cahoon Construction Pocatello, Idaho, $1,042,704. Lewis and Clark Grade, gravel, surface, plant-mix oil, and drain .67 mile of Park and Last Chance Gulch in Helena, part "of the Unionville-Helena road, project to be completed in 150 days.
Helena Sand Gravel Helena, $206,007. Custer Construct one 138-foot prestressed concrete bridge over Pumpkin Creek on the Branden-berg Garland Miles City road, just south of the junction, project to be completed by Aug. 31, 1958. J. F.
England, Rapid City. S. $35,538. Sheridan Grade, gravel, bi tuminous surface and drain 5.48 miles on eastern and western approaches to Homestead in 150 (Continued Page 6, Col. 8) siles weapons With 12 of their top advisers at their side, the two Western lead- ers considered concrete moves recommended by two teams of ex perts who reviewed the problem during the day.
No announcement was made after the night meeting. Eisenhower and Macmillan opened their far-ranging global review Wednesday. The round of talks was due to end Friday afternoon after a fourth session. A final communique was expected to disclose some of the highly-secret moves discussed to offset Russia's scientific diplomatic challenge to the free nations. In advance of Thursday night's meeting, both men pledged in a mid-day announcement to seek to pool their atomic-missile resources "for the service of the free world" and not just their two na-! tions.
Authoritative officials said both governments planned talks afterward with allied countries in Europe, the Mideast, Asia and even Airborne Bandits Hold Up Bank In Florida Town FT. MEAD. Fla. (U.B-Two free-shooting airborne bandits descend ed on this central Florida town in a stolen' plane Thursday, captured a constable and away with $26,657 looted from terrified em ployes of the-First State Bank. Four hours later, Polk County Sheriff Hagan Parrish announced the capture of one of the suspected bank robbers, a pilot for a Tampa construction company whose name was withheld pending formal charge.
The flu-stricken sheriff, directing the' all-out manhunt by planes, bloodhounds and bristling posses from his sickbed in Winter Haven. said identity of the second bandit was known. Parrish said the suspect was taken into custody at Tampa and was being questioned at the Hills borough county jail. Hillsborough sheriff Ed Black burn refused to confirm that the man held in jail could be classified as a prime suspect because "the investigation is still prema ture." Blackburn revealed that another man was being held in the Tampa city jail in connection with the bold holdup. The two bandits, operating from a small plane they stole at Winter Haven, stormed, into the Fort Meade bank with silk stockings shrouding their faces after pistol- whipping the town constable into submission and commandeerins his car.
They scooped up most of the cash in sight, fired wild shots over the heads of employes and roared away in the constable's car to the stolen plane parked in a pasture on the outskirts of the small citrus town. Montana Weather MONTANA feast) Partly cloudy through Saturday; warmer west, slightly warmer east Fri day: highs 30 northeast to 50 in! southwest; warmer west Friday night, lows 15 northeast to 25-35 west and south; warmer Saturday, highs 40-50. MONTANA (west) Considerable cloudiness Friday and Friday night: cloudy, occasional light rain Saturday; slightly warmer: highs both days 35-50; lows Friday night 25-35. THE TABLE Maximums are for the 12 hours, minimums for the 18 hours and precipitation for the 24 hours ending at 5:30 p.m. Thursday.
MONTANA High Low Pep. Billings' 30 25 .16 Belgrade 45 26 .11 Butte 47 30 .10 Cut Bank 28 Dillon 53 20 21 .04 Drummond Glasgow Great Falls Havre Helena Kalispell Lewistown Livingston Miles City Missoula W.Yellowstone Whitehall 38 25 25 21 33 17 .01 i 28' 14- .01 i 41 24 34 25 .09 34 19 48 28 29 24 .11 39 26 .09 49 31 .08 50 24 i ic and missile resources. The stat led aim was for "greater service to the free world." A White House announcement also said Eisenhower and Macmillan and their foreign affairs chiefs were in full agreement on finding ways to harness their nation's resources to meet Russia's new diplomatic-scientific offensive. Sitting in on the night session were Secretary of State Dulles, British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and five additional advisers on each side. These included Secretary of Defense McElroy, Deputy Defense Secretary Quarles, Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Lewis Strauss, Livingston Merchant, the U.S.
ambassador to Canada, and John (Hav Whitnev. American ambassador to London. British participants were Edwin Plowden, chairman of Britain's Atomic Energy Authority, Sir Harold Caccia, ambassador to Washington, Richard Powell, permanent secretary in the Defense Ministry, Cabinet Secretary Sir Norman Brook and British Embassy Minister Lord Hood. The Eisenhower-Macmillan talks thus far were reported concentrating on the scientific-military field, with discussion of Russia's threat to the Middle East left over for the final conference scheduled for rnaay atternoon. Aiterwara, an official communique on the ses sions will be issued.
The joint announcement at the White House Thursday said Eisen hower and Macmillan had named two high level committees to mak (Continued Page (5, Col. 3) Danish Physicist (Jets Peace Award WASHINGTON U.R) President Eisenhower cautioned Thursday that the world's headlong scientific pace presents man with choice between "a technology of abundance and the technology of destruction." Rut ho said, "onlv Hip master Ucicntist only the almighty" can show the way to peace for man kind. The President issued his solemn warning at ceremonies honoring Danish physicist Dr. Neils Bohr, who was presented with the first $75,000 Atoms -for -Peace award. The ceremonies were held at the National Academy of Sciences.
Bohr, 72, already holds a Nobel Prize for his pioneering exploration of the structure of the atom. During World War II he played a key role in helping the United States develop the first atomic bomb. Thursday, the balding, blue-eyed scientist listened, massive head bowed, while the president and some 200 diplomats, industrialists, other scientists applauded his tireless" work of the past 10 years toward turning the atom to peaceful uses. "We pay tribute to a great the president said, "one whose mind has exploded the mys teries of the inner structure of the atom, and whose spirit has reached into the very hearts of men." Eisenhower said that while the atom "apparently conceals no more secrets" from scientists, "there are a few who like myself still see in the radio something nearly miraculous" and in television transmission "something absolutely impossible." Bohr said in accepting the award that "exploration of the world of atoms" has "provided mankind with unprecedented opportunities nd grave dangers." r-i. I 1 i 11 utamsn pnysicisi saia tne way "to meet this challenge" was indicated, by "that world-wide co-1 operation which has manifested itself through the ages by the development of science." Defendant Sentenced In Rurnlarv flase 3 I Raymond Churchill, pleaded guihy Thursday in District Court to a charge of burglary and was sentenced by Judge T.
E. Downey to serve one year in the state prison. The defendant was charged In the illegal entry on Oct. 18 of the New National Market at 307 N. Main.
He had previously appeared twice in District Court, requesting and receiving court appointed counsel before entry of plea. Ten True Bills Returned by' U.S. Grand Jury Ten true bills were returned late Thursday by a federal grand jury at the close of a two-day session in the Federal Building. One was in the matter of the United States against Harold C. Sadler, former Bozeman resident, charging one count of personal income tax evasion.
Another cited Joseph Fights Well Known accused of the theft of a government-owned jeep on or about last June 3 at Hardin The defendant, named in two counts, is in custody in the Yellow stone county jail. The names of the other eight defendants were withheld because they have not yet been appre- Sadler, described a repre sentative of U.S. District Attorney Krest Cyr's office as a widely known former star athlete at Montana State College and afterward a. football and basketball referee, is reported now living in Mesa, Ariz. Arrested several weeks ago in Arizona, Sadler appeared before a U.S.
commissioner there and filed a $1,500 bond at Phoenix. He is at liberty on continuance of the bail. The government charges Sadler with having filed a false and fradu-lent joint income tax return for himself and his wife covering calendar 1954. The government says Sadler reported a net income for the period of $1,667.09 with no income tax due, whereas it right fully was $6,358.86, with $992.95 owing to' the department of inter nal revenue. The eight undisclosed true bills Include three in the Butte Division of Federal Court, two each in the Helena and Great Falls Divisions and one in the Missoula Division.
The no-bills also were reported out. The grand jury, of which John S. Wulf Jr. of Butte was foreman, started its work at 10 a.m. Wednesday and finished at 4 p.m.
Thursday. Mansfield Urges Re-Assessment BOZEMAN (U.R) Sen. Mike Mansfield Thursday called for a re-assessment of U.S. foreign and defense policy. Mansiefld said that in order for the United States to "regain its position of superiority, we must have a re-assessment of our foreign and defense policy, unification of scientists of Western Europe and the United States and more recognition by the federal government of scientists and their work." In his second of three speeches Thursday in Bozeman the junior Montana senator told a Montana State College student and faculty audience, "We have the brains.
We cannot (however) place a dollar sign on freedom and security. We must pay the price, high though it may be." As he had previously this week in Montana, the Democratic Senate whip called for ''a unification of scientists of the United States and Western European scientists and repeated his suggestion that the education of scientifically gifted students be subsidized. Turning to the domestic problem at Little Rock he called for the FBI making public files on the integration problem in the 'Arkansas capital city. BOZEMAN, Mont. Sen.
Mansfield (D-Mont) a (Continued Page 6. Col. 4) the required two-thirds- vote for suspension by the 29-man council. Asked whether the Teamsters had done anything at all to cor rect widespread corrupt conditions, as previously charged by the AFL-CIO and the Senate Rack ets Investigating Committee head ed by Sen. McClellan (D-Ark), Meany replied with a flat "no." Meany said the suspension action means that the lv-milhon-man Teamsters organization cannot be accepted back in good standing in the parent federation unless it completely boots out Teamsters president-elect James R.
Hoffa. Meany and the council ruled that unless the Teamsters promptly consent to ousting Hoffa and meet other cleanup conditions, complete expulsion of the union from AFL-CIO ranks will be rec- (Continued Page 6, Col. 1) Italian Scientist Gets Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden (ffl Dr, Daniel Bovet, an Italian scientist who helped ease the lot of allergy sufferers with antihistamines and of surgical patients with a deadly poison, was awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize for Medicine Thursday. He arose from a sickbed to say how happy he was. Dr.
Bovet is the man who adapt ed curare, used by South American Indians for centuries to poi son their darts, for use synthetic ally as a relaxing anesthetic in modern surgery. He was a pioneer in the develop ment of antihistamines to combat such irritants as hay fever, rash, eczema and asthma. Now he is studying the effect of tranquilizers on human beings. Sweden's Royal Caroline Insti tute of Medicine made the award. which carries a cash prize of about $42,000 from the foundation established by Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite.
Dr. Bovet was recovering from Asian flu at his home in Rome when he got the official notification. The lean, slightly built Swiss-born scientist, 50, was happily overwhelmed. "I'm very happy," he said. "It was a.
great surprise. I did not even know I was a candidate." Five Young Men Killed in Crash OAKLAND, Calif. (U.R) Five young men were dashed 'to' death Thursday when their car slammed into a concrete abutment on the Bay Bridge approach ramp at 90 miles an hour and was virtually torn to bits. Highway patrolmen called it the second worst accident in the 21-year history of the Bay span. The car was ripped to pieces by the force of the crash and the body of one victim was flung over the railing of the 120-foot high overpass where it was not found for more than an hour after the crash.
The victims were identified as: James Paul Mosher, 20, and his brother, Kenneth Wayne, 18. both of El Cerrito; James A. Spaulding, 19, a Navy sailor and father of a week-old baby daughter; Raymond Dill, 16, and Melvin Betts, 19, all of Castro Valley. i Officers said the wreck was the worst tragedy on the bridge since a bus flipped off the distribution ramp six years ago, killing eight passengers. A witness to the crash, motorist Lewis Eichelberger of Alameda, told police the youths' car whipped past him at an estimated 90 miles an hour seconds before the accident.
"I thought he tried to make a left turn onto MacArthur but apparently he was going too fast," he 'said. "He hit the abutment. There was a loud crash and the seemed to blow apart." car HELENA Uft Nine more Montana road and bridge jobs were awarded to contractors Thursday on low bids totaling $1,941,763. A million-dollar-plus overpass for Billings calls for four-lane traffic, and will eliminate present Butte Protests Helena Road Diversion Plan A Helena Chamber of Commerce proposal for re-routing of U. S.
north-south interstate Highway No. 91 so as to by-pass Butte, drew sharp comment Thursday from Larry Smith, president of the Butte Chamber of Commerce. "In the best interests of na tional defense and for best serv ice to the country in general and Montana in particular," Mr. Smith said, "Highway 91 should inter change in Butte and not somewhere else nearby. "The interchange should be here because of the strategic importance of Butte's copper mines, the Anaconda smelter, and the fact that Butte is the cross-roads locally for four transcontinental railroads and two major airlines.
"The routing of Highway 91 should stand as originally outlined, and certainly the special interests of certain individual communities should rate well behind, not in front of, our national defense." The Helena proposal as set forth (Continued Page 6, Col. 2) Action on Prison Salaries Held Up HELENA The Montana Board of Examiners Thursday postponed approval of salary in creases ana hiring of new employes at the State Prison until a written report is received from E. A. Reuterdahl of the controller's office. He reported verbally mat tne prison budget will be about $103,000 short by Jan.
31, 1959. Reuterdahl, chief of the budget aivision or tne state controller's office, checked the prison's financial situation earlier this week. He was sent to the Deer Lodge in stitution Dy tne board. Warden F. O.
Burrell's proposed payroll calls for salary increases to many custodial officers and other prison personnel, as well as the hiring of a number of new employes at the prison. Reuterdahl said that the ward en recommendations for hiring 18 new officers and the prison "would run him short about for 16 months, not including the October payroll." He explained that meeting the current payrolls for the next 16 months and recommended additions for 15 months would make the $103,000 estimated deficit. Need Sleeve Stretchers? When youngsters outgrow the sleeves of winter wearables, here's a tip: Sew knitted wristlets to sleeve lining, at each cuff. Adds wear and warmth to garments. But if you've outgrown wearables, furniture or toys you'd like to sell for cash, want ads are your tip! Phone 5451 for an ad-writer.
Bing Crosby, 53, and Kaihryn Grant, 23, Texas Beauty, Wed in Nevada By BOB THOMAS LAS VEGAS, Nev. (S) Widower Bing Crosby married a bright, brown-eyed beauty from Texas named Kathryn Grant Thursday in a nuptial mass culminating a ro mance that began four years ago on a movie lot. "Mrs. Crosby, how about that!" the crooner grinned as they walked out of St. Ann's Catholic Church.
The 45-minute ceremony, during wnicn Dotn received communion, was performed by Msgr. John J. Ryan. Crosby, 53, wore a blue pinstripe single-breasted suit with white shirt and blue tie. His ac tress bride, 23, was dressed in a white suit with purple orchid and a white lace mantilla she bought in bpain.
The wedding took even their friends and family by surprise, but Bing airily seemed to wonder what all the fuss was about. "We've been going together for four years," he told The Associated Press during a post-wedding breakfast at the Sands Hotel. But wasn't the romance broken off a year ago? "Ostensibly it. was, but that was only so we could sit back and think things over," he replied. "I've been sold on the idea for a long time.
It was a matter of selling Kathy on it. We decided to go ahead in the past week." Bing didn't let any of his family except his mother in on his plans. He and Kathy came to Las Vegas,.