Daily Messenger, The (Newspaper) - November 25, 1964, Canandaigua, New York Year NT VOL 168 NO 239 PHONE CANANDAIGUA NEW YORK WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 25 1964 Established 1796 A WEEK HOME DELIVERED A COPY Budget Gets Attention Of LBJ Aides Talent Search Being Made For Administration JOHNSON CITY Tex UPI Johnson back at his ranch from a hurry-up trip to East Texas digs into budget problems today and consults with the chief talent scout for Ws administration The President made such a last-minute decision to attend a dinner honoring Texas cratic Chairman Marvin Watson Pleasant Tex day night that Mrs Johnson got dressed in less than 11 utes to make the plane The Secret Service and the White House press corps also had to scramble to catch him The Johnsons flew in a DCS aircraft with Texas Gov and Mrs John Connally on the 300 mile trip from the OBJ Ranch to the town of about 100 miles east of Dallas The port doesn't ordinarily operate at night but landing lights were turned on for the plane ing the President The Johnsons flew only part way back in the slow-moving DCS switching to an Air Force at Longview Tex to return to the ranch before mid- night Reports circulated at the ner that Watson an executive of the lane Star Steel Co may be tapped by Johnson to fill an important White House staff job before long On today's schedule Johnson was to see Postmaster Genera John A Gronouski Budget Di K e r m i t Gordon and John Macy Civil Service Com mission chairman Macy has been given the jol of conducting a talent search to discover good prospects for top level posts in the Johnson ad ministration Tlie White HOUSE said he President wanted to discuss th post office budget and futur plans with Gronouski meeting with Gordon and Macy The President's two Lynda and year-old expected to ily down from Washington for a get-together over the traditional turkey dinner New Riots Saigon Crushed SAIGON South Viet Nam UPI Vietnamese smashed through a wall of flame on a Saigon street today o crush a new dot anti- government riots Prime Minister Tran Van luong clamped martial law anc a 10 p.m to 5 curfew on his capital city this evening at the end of four straight student rioting against his regime The government reported 59 persons were injured in of rioting today most o them policemen Two officer were said to be near death one from stab wounds and the from a hand grenade explosion earlier in the Saigon Radio warned tha courtmartial and a swift penalty awaited agitators who stirred up more trouble in defi ance of army rule The new rioting broke out shortly after U.S Ambassador Maxwell Taylor left for ington to confer with President Johnson on the future of the war in South Viet Nam During the day's violence demonstrating students had poured gasoline on a street and set it ablaze in an effort to fend off the paratroopers The new rioting broke out shortly after Ambassador Maxwell D Taylor Washington to confer with President Johnson about the war in South Viet Nam The paratroopers knocked over five crude barricades to advance on the demonstrators but few injuries were reported because most of the students retreated hurling rocks Later a hand grenade ex- among four paratroopers rebellious from a to the national COUNT EH As a gag service station operator Robert Powers of Strongsville Ohio sent a 530 hill to one lady customers In mirror writing everything ward and upside down The customer replied in like vein She delivered a heavy box containing pennies taped together in one long string Federal Grand Jury Baker Probe Widens Paper Tomorrow The Messenger will not lish an edition tomorrow so that its employes may spend Thanksgiving Day with their families Regular publication will resume Friday Bomb Is A Shiner LATHROP Calif UPI A package started licking in the post office Tuesday deputy and firemen gingerly opened it and found a shoe shining machine driving a mob of high school school area pupils Buddhist center with fixed Approximately persons claimed asylum behind a wire fence at the Buddhist center Some of them began throwing rocks over the fence at the government then the grenade exploded The para- trooper commander said his men were not armed wilh hand grenades There were no immediate re ports of injuries as a result of the blast The Americans in the Saigon area were warned to stay off the streets and crowds unless absolutely sary for official business WASHINGTON cial federal grand jury is of he ing business deals of former Senate Democratic Secretary Robert G Baker The panel which in- more than a month ago has issued a number of John Doe subpoenas They are returnable at 10 EST today The John Doe subpoena does not reveal the name of the person called to appear In a Sen chairman of the Senate Rules Committee reported Tuesday that his investigators have not been able to find a key witness in an alleged political payoff Baker The witness is Don B Reynolds an insurance agent of suburban Silver Spring Md Jordan said a subpoena has been issued for Reynolds before the rules com- but it cannot be served because Reynolds cannot be Senate investigators were said to be planning to complete the Baker investigation before the new Congress convenes in committee was dent Reynolds would show up so public hearings could begin Dec li But a spokesman for olds night lhat the January A rules spokesman said he was not expected tc return from a vacation until the end of December He did not say was The empaneled in early October was given the job of investigating false ments in official statements to a duly constituted the government It was revealed earlier in Senate hearings thai Baker ob- a loan from the Small Business Administration on the basis of a false statement of his financial worth The loan was vised by Baker to buy an interest in the sel at Ocean City Md Peking U S In Parley WARSAW China's nuclear potential and the uing crisis in Southeast Asia were considered virtually tain to come up today in talks between Hie United Slates and Communist China A meeting between of both sides was uled in an century Polish palace It was the official sion of a series of talks between the two tries began on Aug 1 1955 The last previous session was held Sept 23 The American ambassador to Poland John Moore Cabot was chief U.S representative His Chinese counterpart was Ambassador Wang Kuo-chuan What both representatives say to each other is never disclosed since secrecy is considered an essential part of the talks It ensures thai whatever is said actually represents the views of the two governments which have no other direct contacts But it appeared extremely likely that Red China's recent explosion of a nuclear device would be on the agenda The situation in Southeast Asia anc Peking's claim to have down an unmanned U.S recon naissance plane also were con s i d e r e d probable items The nuclear question could be raised in the contest of a Pe king proposal that a conference of all the countries of the world he convened to dis cuss the Question ot the com prohibition and thorough destruction of nuclear weap ons The proposal was part of a Chinese Communist announce lhat a nuclear device set off Oct 16 A copy of proposal was delivered to In Die-Hard Rebels Are Still Fighting With Congo Army Troops Not'Sporting To Keep Them LONDON in a British zine called Sporting Life M lhc last Cheltenham horse race meeting Mr Mi- chael Vance inadvertently put his front teeth in someone else's coat pocket before going out to ride Would the finder kindly re- turn them via race track cial Robin Lord as their er's tight-lipped smile is be- ginning to wear rather thin anil his digestion is ing Enough Is Enough PORTSMOUTH E n a n UPI Streets at a new de in this port city ar being named for characters 01 of works by Charles Dickens But the Public Works Com balked at one The Weather IN CANANDAIGUA The Academy weather station re- 24 hour high 46 low 39 At noon temperature was 45 barometric pressure 30.2 and falling humidity 99 pei cent Precipitation last if 04 inch Wind from he south at 10 miles an hour ORIENTAL UIP MASSACRE OCCURRED in American planes carried out a during rescue mission at Stanleyville in the Congo Survivors of the massacre of tages in the city were evacuated to Dr Carlson's Death Described By Priest BRUSSELS UPI A Belgian survivor of lie Congo age said today American missionary Dr Paul Carlson was killed when Stanleyville rebels opened fire on a group of hostages they herded into the street The doctor died from a bullet wound in the head when took him from the Hotel Victoria yesterday morning Survivor Tells Of Dr Carlson's Heroics Courage EDITOR'S One ot he Stanleyville survivors who arrived in Belgium today was Marcel Dti a Belgian engineer In he following last days of his life by Dr of the courage shown in the oast days of his life by Dr Paul Carlson American wlm was under a el sentence and who was slain by rebel gunfire In Tuesday's massacre By MARCEL DU BUISSON LA LOUVIERE Belgium UPI think the one real Continued on 3 Col 3 said Father Jean Declerck Roman Catholic priest The clergyman was one of 160 Belgian refugees who ar- rived here today from Leopold vilie on a chartered airliner They were saved in the rescue mis sion Carlson 36 of Culver City Calif had been under a rebe death sentence as an mercenary spy Kneel In Street Father said Carlson was with a group of about 20 hostages who were marcher from the Victoria Hotel just as the Belgian forces ar- rived to save them He said Hie hostages were forced to kneel in the street The rebels fired wildly into the crowd then fled Other survivors told ing stories of atrocities at the hands ot wild-eyed rebels One Continued on Page 3 Col 1 600 Civilians Waiting For Airlift Rescue Congo rebels ished wilh Belgian and regular Congo troops today in the blood stained streets of Stanleyville About while civilians for- mer hostages of the Communist backed rebels lucked sniper fire as they wailed at Stanleyville Airport lor U.S Air Force transports to ferry them safety here More than 350 hostages in- 15 Americans were re- ported still in the hands of rebels A Belgian the only white military casualty reported so far in was killed by a Millet No civilian casualties lad been reported since the were rescued from their rebel captors Tuesday More Refugees Arrive A U.S Embassy spokesman said 889 whites had teen brought to Leopoldville and were bringing in more by the hour Belgians among were already back home in Brussels Those brought here included all Americans in Stanleyville Unofficial sources said the rebels killed about 20 hostages in Tuesday's blood bath ing two American missionaries Paul Carlson 36 of ver City Calif and Phyllis Rine of Mount Vernon Ohio Also confirmed as a sacre victim was Hector Mac- millan a Canadian who worked for the Fields Mission More than 300 rebels were re- ported killed in fighting day and early today The Belgian paratroopers who landed in the city Tuesday to rescue the white hostages joined with the led Congo army today to clean up pockets of rebel resistance The missing Americans ed wife and four children of Canadian Mclvin Loewen Found Alive More than hostages were found alive in Stanleyville and the area surrounding it Most were airlifted to safety in Continued on Page 3 Col 4 Dairy Farmers Urged To Build For Change President Johnson's First Thanksgiving Proclamation Ontario County dairy farmers were advised yesterday by a Cornell University professor to build for change rather than permanence when they decide lo spend money in expanding their dairy operations Prof Lou C Cunningham economist in the university's College of Agriculture gave this advice at the and Home Center when he presented a preliminary report on a survey of commercial dairy farms in i central and western New York to the Ontario County Extension Service dairy commodity ice at Cornell to help farmers to understand the competitive position of the dairy farmer and to aid planning committees such as the county group to help other dairy farmers Fewer Units There was a sharp change toward fewer operating units j now only a of it has been farms in the region now fall in the cow group the group comprises 22 per cent and there was a three per cent rise in the or more herds Parts of 14 central and ern New York counties com- prise region studied As of the professor said This is not over yet in this region There also are notable changes in herd size The study shows that about half the commercial dairy JOHNSON CITY Tex UPI of President Johnson's Thanksgiving Day Thanksgiving Day 1964 By The President of the United States of America A Proclamation As the harvest season draws to a close and our storehouses bulge with the bounty of the land it is our desire to ob- serve in the and tion of our forebears a special day dedicated to giving thanks to day on which to lay aside our daily tasks and cares and pay joyous homage lo him We are o raise our voices in his praise and to claim our heartfelt gratitude for another year in which we have been blessed with a with intellectual humanitarian economic and technical advances and achievements arid with other gains loo numerous to mention Although vie have been blessed with unsurpassed we recognize that erty and want exist throughout the among vvc pledge ourselves lo the Medication ol those evils We know loo that the dation for a peaceful world is still to be built and that even now armed strife exists in of the world We are that gallant men of our armed services have fallen in the eternal quest for peace with freedom dignity and justic for all We share with their be- reaved families and friends a sense of tragic loss In the words of Abraham Lincoln we resolve that these honored dead shall not have died in and vow that their loss will spur us ever onward until man's great dream of universal peace is realized Yet we are filled with an in- impulse to give thanks for free society of free men free institutions and free elections freedom of speech our freedom of the press and our freedom to worship as our con- science dictates emphasis upon the equality and worth of man humanitarian instincts right to life liberty and the pursuit of confidence in our tyto meet challenges of day and future For these are the things that apart as a made our nation will keep our nation great So as our forefathers in ginia in New England and throughout this land have done for more than three and one- half centuries let us appoint a special day on which all of us in keeping with the dictates of our own conscience will give thanks lo for his blessings And on that let us rededicate ourselves to meeting the challenges of present with the fortitude and faith with which our fore- fathers met the challenges of the past Now therefore I Lyndon B Johnson President of the ed States of America in con- sonance with the joint tion of lie Congress approved December 1941 55 stat 862 5 designating the fourth Thursday of November in each year as Thanksgiving Day do hereby proclaim Thursday November 1964 as a day of national ing On lhat day let us gather in our homes and in our places of worship and in other suitable places to give thanks o God for His graciousness and His generosity lo pledge lo Him our lo beseech his divine guidance and the wisdom and strength to recognize and follow that to pray to Him that the forces of evil violence in- difference intolerance and in- humanity may soon vanish from the face of the earth and that peace reason ing and goodwill may reign throughout the world In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused Seal of the United States of America lo be at fixed Done at the oily of ton thirteenth day of No in the year of our Lord nineteen hun and sixty-four and of the independence of the United States of America the one hundred and eighty ninth By the Lyndon R Johnsun Desk Rusk Secretary of Stale evaluated and he said he hoped that when the job is done he may be able to return lo the area to explain it to cial dairy farmers Of the 400 commercial dairy farms in the study 67 of Idem are doing businesses in Ontario County Some of the problems brought out by the professor that will need solving in the future in- How are we going to handle How will we handle the need for more silage Will there be more sis on corn How are we going to house Change Not Over The professor noted that the change in dairy housing has not spent itself Obsolescence is not over We're far from ing the point of stability in cultural change In a sampling survey con- ducted by Cornell appointed men last May it was found that the number of commercial ry farms in a specific area of western New York have ped nearly 50 per cent in 10 years Using 150 road segments that were used in a university pling survey 10 years ago the professor revealed that there were 417 full-time dairy farms in May on these roads This figure was down to 272 in May 1954 In the past 10 years the professor said there have been 196 drop-outs in this area of sampling and 51 new commercial dairy farms Of he drop-outs 107 went inlo rural residences 47 to farms 29 lo part-time dairy farms the professor re- The over-all survey was con- ducted by the Intension VIEW DAIRY FARM TRENDS Officers of the Ontario County Extension Service dairy commodity committee look over dairy farm survey charts presented lo the group by Prof Lou C Cunningham Cornell University agricultural economist The com- elected Burton Infills lur left Clifton Springs as vice and re-elected George also Clifton Springs as chairman I