Independent Record (Newspaper) - November 26, 1961, Helena, Montana Ohio State Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota 50 20 23 21 Iowa Notre Dame Rutgers Columbia 42 21 32 19 Washington Wash State Missouri Kansas 21 17 10 7 UCLA Southern Cal Arkansas Texas Tech 10 7 28 0 Colorado Iowa State 34 0 Michigan State 34 Illinois 7 LSU Tulane Oklahoma Nebraska 62 0 21 14 Purdue Indiana Harvard Yale 34 12 27 0 Vol 5 Helena Montana Sunday November 26 1961 18 Sections Price Ten Cents New Mexico BYU 34 6 Oregon State 6 Oregon 2 U.S Officials Foresee Peace in Berlin Talks Hits Sam C Ford Rites East-West Pact SECURITY COUNCIL Thant left acting United Nations Security General chats with his advisor on Congo affairs Gen Indar Jit during meeting of the Security Council at the UN in New York City Valerian Zorin Soviet gate to the UN tits at the right foreground In rear right is Conor Cruise O'Brien UN representative in The Congo Man wearing glasses right center it Dr Ralph Burche UN under AP Even Population Dies Katanga President Warns Of Policy of Violence By Adrian Porter Elisabethville President Moise Tshombe warned Saturday any attempt to end Ka- tanga's secession by force would be met by force even if the whole Katanga and to die Tshombe called a special news conference to reply to the UN Security Council resolution ed Friday declaring secession from the central Con- government must be ended by force if necessary Policy of Violence A policy of violence will be met by Tshombe told newsmen We are prepared for any negotiation and solution of the secession problem by ful means However if we are attacked we will reply by force Even if the whole Katanga Goes on Active Duty Enterprise Giant Nuclear Carrier Is Commissioned Newport News Va of ever larger more ex- The giant carrier Enterprise went pensive sister ships on active duty Saturday and Navy Secretary John B Connally said she would reign at least for the near future as the country's only carrier Connally told more than persons present for the formal commissioning ceremonies that the Navy in its constant effort to economize would recommend its next carrier be powered by conventional fuels There is little doubt that we will desire more nuclear carriers at some date in the when a way is found to cut both the size and cost the Navy secretary said But until then he said the Enterprise is one of a in any sense a prototype for a Top Navy brass invited guests crew members and their families packed the cavernous hangar deck of the carrier to witness the commissioning of the lion vessel As a symbol of the continuation of the proud name Enterprise the jack and the national flag last flown by the famous World War II Enterprise were hoisted during the ceremonies Although the Navy will not ask that its next carrier be nuclear powered Connally said the En- the nuclear cruiser Long Beach and a nuclear frigate will form a task group able to travel the lent of five trips around the world at top speed and white has to die and our economy to be destroyed we will resist Hold U Thant Responsible If the United Nations forces a repetition of the events of Sept 19 it will be the United Nations fault and the new eral U Thant will bear more re- sponsibility for what happens than did the late Mr General Dag Hammarskjold Tshombe was referring to an attempt by UN forces in Septem ber to carry out forcibly a UN resolution calling for the ouster of white mercenaries from Ka- tanga's army Bitter fighting broke out ending a week later in a truce that left Katanga's secession as strong as ever Drops Disarming Plan In Leopoldville the UN Com- mand abandoned as tune a plan to disarm the entire central Congolese army garrison at Kindu in its search for the troops that mutinied there and slaughtered 13 Italian airmen two weeks ago It handed the whole task of finding and ing the mutineers over to the government Reds to Hold Tests chev published a declaration night that if any other nation proceeds with nuclear tests the Soviet Union will follow suit This seemed aimed specially at the testing program of the United States Only in Memories Henry Sieben Pioneer Stockman Rides Again By Marilyn Maddox One of the West's greatest boys of all time Henry Sieben rides again at this time of the year in the memories of stockmen whose roots go deep This neer who came to the West by wagon train yet was the first Montana sheepman to fly in his fields was one of the fathers of the International Livestock Ex- position reopening in Chicago Sunday Nov 26 The colorful accomplishments of Sieben striding in high-heeled boots across some of the nation's greatest expansion years dims by comparison today's fictionalized TV talcs of the frontier The immigrant German farm hoy saved slim earnings from his first a month Montana job until he bought oxen for a ing business He miner to work placer claim for a time Sieben sol his start us a Henry man in 68 buying 90 to 100 tle at to a head and ing them the next year This Montana trail ended in Helena quietly nearly a quarter of a century ago on November 26 1937 at 89 The latest honor bestowed was his election this year to the National Cowboy Hall of Fame and Western Heritage Foundation at Oklahoma City Sieben rode with Charlie sell in Central Montana in his ranching Montana days on the eastern prairies with Conrad Kohrs Granville Stuart Nick and other now great ghost riders of the ranges Sieben who was in business for himself at 17 and from farm labor on a Dutch tom Illinois farm helped create the Montana 77 years ago on the banks Continued Page 1 Hunters Reported Okay youths reported missing in a rugged area southwest of Phillipsburg were sighted by a search plane day The pilot said the two were okay Sheriff Nick Munis said Ricky Miller 19 and Tom both of Butte apparently will shoe out of the wilderness Munis said an attempt to reach the two by jeep was thwarted by snow Further at- to reach the two were called off when the boys were reported okay were on a hunting trip and had left their homes last Tuesday parents said State One Death Listed By The Associated Press j A snowstorm that piled up to 40 inches of new snow in parts of western Montana continued to sock the ure State Saturday night and counted its third death Firmin Henry Dumonceaux of Foley Minn died in a Missoula hospital of auto accident injuries suffered Friday night He was a passenger in a car driven by Omer J Jacquemart of lingering illness Are Tentatively Set for Tuesday Funeral services for Sam C Ford whose life career spanned 79 years and took him to tana's highest offices including governor are tentatively uled here at the Hagler Mortuary Tuesday afternoon He died at his home 309 North Rodney shortly after awakening at 8 Saturday The attending physician death to weakness stemming who was injured and reported in critical condition in a Missoula hospital Clearing Seen Today The Weather Bureau said the storm which centered its fury on western and northern Montana would let up by Sunday afternoon Graves Creek 30 miles west of Missoula reported the snowfall most of it in a 24-hour period on the ground and Kalispell to the north had an even foot Traffic was halted on Highway Continued on Page 3 World War II Governor Ford a smiling round-faced man was Montana's World War II governor former attorney eral and members of the tana Supreme Court from 1929 to 1933 Ford a Republican had been confined to hospitals or his home since April 1959 after suffering what his physicians termed a neu paralysis of a leg and failing sight He also received treatment in Rochester Minn Broke Demo Reign The former furnace tender table waiter and newspaper boy Custer's Last Stand Historical Museum to Get Two of Works became governor in 1941 elected by a heavy majority at the age of 58 to succeed Democrat Roy E Ayers and breaking a 16-year reign of Democratic governors At the time he was only the third GOP governor ever elected in Montana the others being Joseph M Dixon and John E Rickards In 1944 he became the first GOP governor to win a second term in Montana Only Ford J Hugo Aronson Sam V Stewart John E Erickson and Joseph K Toole have ever served two or more terms Two Living Death of the Helena lawyer leaves Democrat John Bonner and Aronson as the only former Treasure State chief executives still living Ford lost a bid for a third term to Bonner in 1948 Between his various offices he practiced law in Great Falls ena and Cut Bank Born in Kentucky Sam Ford was born Nov 7 1882 in Albany Clinton County Ky His father William a man yearned for the West and a few years later the family moved to a ranch near Ivanhoe in west ern Kansas Little Sam walked five miles over the windswept Kansas plains for his first big daily lessons school house in a barren soc He ofter recalled By Mayo Ashley lure must be given to Gov Nutter Two of the most famous I merely helped to formulate final ings of noted Montana artist gar S Paxson will be placed in the Montana Historical Museum on Dec 6 according to Michael Kennedy director of the His Society Kennedy said the two ings Custer's Last which is considered piece and The Last will be transported from Missoula and will be given to the Museum on indefinite loan Eight Feet Square The more noted of the two Custer's Last is ly hanging in the lobby of the Elks Temple in Missoula The second The Last de- a buffalo hunt has hung for some time in the Missoula County Airport Both canvases measure nearly eight feet square Kennedy said The transfer of the painting was arranged nearly two months ago according to Kennedy He said arrangements were made by him in a meeting with Gov ald G Nutter and Richard Hale Jr one of the six owners of the two pictures Kennedy said credit for securing the two State National Weather Forecast Helena and Cloudy with snow today Snow ending this afternoon Partly cloudy tonight and Monday er High today 25 Low tonight 10 The official Helena 15 lure at midnight was Billings Station H Belgrade 13 41 41 28 44 14 31 28 26 Butte Cut Bank Glasgow lavre lelena 32 25 30 Livingston 47 Miles City 37 31 W 42 27 H L 33 Calgary 29 26 34 Denver 22 Las Vegas 34 Los Angeles 54 27 53 16 New Orleans 69 24 N York city 56 Phoenix Ore 44 St Louis 64 Salt Lake 48 San Fran 57 Seattle 37 Spokane Washington 57 Museum Leaders Delighted The directors and the board of the Historical Society are de- lighted to be even the temporary recipients of these two highly significant Montana paintings Kennedy said We are larly pleased because our own collection of Paxson paintings is neither as large nor as important as it should be Edgar S Paxson deserves greater recognition from the people of Montana than he has received to date Highway Holiday Death Toll Tops 300 Mark By The Associated Press Traffic 301 Fires 31 Miscellaneous 59 Total 391 Traffic deaths surged over the 300 mark late Saturday as the long Thanksgiving holiday end entered its final quarter Still to come was the final day's volume of elers the period regarded most warily by safety officials The traffic toll since the hour tabulating period began at 5 p.m local time Wednesday totaled 301 Fire claimed 31 lives and 59 others died in accidents for a total of 391 deaths William E Paxson grandson of the famous Montana artist stated in a letter to The Independent Record that it was planned to ex- hibit the two large paintings at the World's Fair in Seattle next summer Paxson said the ings would be returned to the Historical Museum following their exhibition in Seattle When questioned regarding plans to transport the paintings to Seattle Kennedy said he knew of no such intentions The ings are merely on loan to us and if the owners want to send them to Seattle we will of course let them go A group of paintings are currently in the lobby of the Montana House of tives The five paintings ing historical scenes of the early west were all painted in 1912 that this lasted about three years Continued on Page 3 To Be Agreed Early Next Year By John M Hightower of- foresee the possibility of negotiations between the Western powers and the viet Union early next year on a peaceful settlement of Berlin crisis But authorities said Saturday wo problems must be dealt with Before such negotiations can be considered reasonably certain One problem is to win the ment of French President Charles de Gaulle who is in London this weekend conferring with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan Must Drop Demands The other problem is to get some indication from Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev that he is pre- pared to negotiate for a com- promise settlement instead of in- sisting on his demand that Wesl Berlin be made a free city The talks here last week be- tween President Kennedy and German Chancellor Konrad nauer gave the Western powers a major start on resolving disputes and misunderstandings in their own step that had to be taken before they could seriously consider negotiations with the Soviet Union Adenauer is uled to meet with De Gaulle in Paris Shows Flexibility The West German leader often regarded as the sonification of rigid policy Continued on Page 3 The Inside Story Features You Will Want to Read Lead Montana should guard her water supply Page 4 Issue of the imports cause steady decline in petroleum industry in Montana Page 4 Crossing the Legion crosses marking fatal dents beginning to make highways look like Flanders Field First page second section Family Fenn had a close shave from becoming hypnotist but traveled a merry clip at his profession Page 10 The Helping Deaconess Home has long ord of caring for children Page 15 City of Man in the Brown Derby recalls several blocks for which Helena is noted Page 7 Different Willard compares game supply in Bitter Root country today with what Lewis and Clark found Page 7 Slow Down and driving hints could save your life if you pay heed Page 5 Community chorus of 80 voices will present ond concert of season Page 16 Helena Businessman Earl Jacoby Is Director Of Building Loan Firm State Tr Cut Unk Drummond 07 Glasgow Tr Great Palls 37 Havre Helena Tr 41 National Los 57 Phoenix Tr flan Francisco M 02 Carroll Wins Nampa Idaho Carroll College of Helena Mont grabbed its second straight basketball win over Northwest Nazarene College here Saturday night NNC lost lo Carroll Friday night The game was fairly even throughout the first half and was knotted at at intermission Northwest shot ahead in the early minutes of the second half but Carroll look over again and held rest of the way Ihn margin the Earl Duke Jacoby prominent Helena businessman has been named a director of the can Building and Loan tion Robert Wallace secretary said Saturday Jacoby who is president of Jacoby's Store for Men Inc lows a family tradition in ing the directorship His father the late Charles J Jacoby was one of the organizers of he American Building and Loan Association which was formed June 7 1922 Mr Jacoby served on the first board of di- rectors and later was named president The late George Jacoby a brother of the newly di- rector also served ns president of association and was a ber of he board of directors a native of Helena is a graduate of St Charles College predecessor of Carroll College and Karl Duke Jacoby has been engaged in the clothing j business for the past 33 years j He worked for 10 years as a man for Union Wholesale cery before entering his present business in 1929 He is a past grand knight of the Knighls of Columbus a past president of Lions Club and a past president of the Helena Ex- change Club In addition to these groups in which he slill I holds membership he is active he Helena Lodge 193 Fraternal Order of Eagles tana Chamber of Commerce ena Chamber of Commerce ena Retail Merchants Association the Montana Club and the Green Meadow Country Club He is a veteran of World War I and a member of the American Legion Mr and Mrs Jacoby reside at 505 Eighth They have one son Charles Glenn Jacoby and two grandchildren Mark and Lynn of Helena