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Winona Daily News
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Winona Daily News

   Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - July 23, 1958, Winona, Minnesota                               Thursday Showers Tht DAILY NEWS of Publication RISES SETS FULL MOON JULY 30 JULY 23, 1958 EIGHTEEN PAGES take thli fern Russ Object to West Summit Plan Senate Passes Reciprocal Trade Leaders Predict Compromise on House Measure By JOE HALL WASHINGTON Senate leaders predicted today that the reciprocal trade extension wit emerge from conference with the House in a form satisfactory to President Sen. Harry F. Byrd who will head the Senate con- told a am sure we will work out a that will be fully acceptable to the Senate Democratic Leader don B. Johnson said the conferees might come up with the full five-year asked by the If he said they surely will agree on last night passed a three-year extension measure 72- 16 after five days of The body rolled up a smashing 63-27 bipartisan vote to give a major victory in his fight to retain his power to over- ride Tariff Commission for quotas and higher But the leaders on both sides who cooperated to achieve this did not call for any other floor tests on provisions put into the by the Senate Finance Com- over administration They preferred Instead to iron these out in The House passed the measure 317-98 last month in a form which me all Eisenhower's Under present the Pres dent can and sometimes doe override a Tariff Commission rec for an in dustry claiming damage from for eign But under the provision the Sen ate his decision agains recommendation would no have prevailed unless a majority of both branches of Congres passed a resolution backing him Manned Balloon Launching From Crosby Postponed ikE HAS THE KpY Angeline 19-year-old blonde from wearing a 10-pound padlocked chain around her yawns and rubs her feet after a long day at the U. S. She tried unsuccessfully Tuesday to see President Eisenhower in an attempt to win back ownership of half of her mother's 703- acre Texas She mailed the key to the padlock to the dent and vowed nut to remove the chain I get MINNEAPOLIS Wea ther conditions today caused post of the high altitude manned balloon launching set for the The Office of Naval Research hoped the launching car be made but a definite decision will not be made unti of it looks fine for an ONR spokesman The postponement was due to a cold front moving into the area from the west and bringing sible showers and turbulent The flight sponsors feared surface winds would be too strong The Hight will be a test for a forthcoming cent in when a John Hopkins University astronomer plans to make spectrographic of the atmosphere of Mars through a powerful Navy Cmdr. Malcolm D. Ross and former Navy balloonist M. Lee Lewis will make the test run of the aluminum gondola and They plan to go up to 80- 000 to Denial of McCoy to Air Force Rapped WASHINGTON W A congre committee rebuked the D fense Department Tuesday the Air Force was denied the ui of Camp The House Appropriations Con in a report on militar construction di not specify Camp McCoy by nami a committee said the Wisconsin Army base wa the site The report in office of the Secretary of Defens took no steps to insist on the us of at least a portion of this facilit in lieu of the use of less action appears to the com to be totally unjustified an it is expected that the area Pine Island Man Sentenced in Accident Death Minn. Gerald E. 21, Pine Island vas sentenced to an indeterminati erm in St. Cloud Tuesday for criminal negligence ii he traffic death of Charles Weis also of Pine District Judge Leo F. laid he was imposing the term as i lesson for the motoring public was convicted by a jury Saturday after a three-day trial Richard 18, brother of the dead youth and chief state testified that Biery had en up to 100 miles per hour before he car took the plunge off a rural killing Typhoon Alice Kills 0 in Tokyo Area TOKYO Dying Typhoon Alice left at least 10 32 ng or injured and thousands homeless today in the coastal Beauty Contest Has A Southern Accent LONG Calif. But statuesque Miss Fifteen beauties almost half of New Hampshire didn't take it that them Southerners carry United Patricia 19, Salem hopes forward today ward the finals of the Miss Uni- I can enjoy verse Tonight the 15 will be narrowed The U.S. contingent was cut one to 5 and the S to Miss USA third Tuesday night when the Who will she Bet judges took their first look at the pageant and the choice entries in this year's beauty is Miss Louisiana her ihe girls from Dixie took seven hair swept back from with the her drew the loudest nod going to representatives of burst of applause from the spectators as she swept down the South Tennessee runway in a white A took a look and The others picked were from walks like she South owns the he Whoever wins tonight will Nebraska and New pete Thursday against the 34 for- Some of those who lost out took cign girls in the selection of 15 it so bard their cried Friday the judges will Congress May Quit Despite Mideast Crisis Expect Ike to Keep in Close Touch With Leaders By JACK BELL WASHINGTON liam F. Knowland said today he expects President hower to maintain close personal liaison with legislative leaders if Congress goes home while the Middle East crisis remains Knowland said telephone com- between the dent and the leaders of both parties offer a better means of keeping legislators informed than if some committee were left be- hind in Washington to maintain can go back in sion within 24 hours if some gency should arise requiring its the Senate Republican leader am sure the dent will keep in close contact with Although he declined public comment on the Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas was reported to have told friends he would find such an arrangement Johnson told a news conference he sees no reason why the Mid- dle East situation should delay the of but be studied once more for a sile and taken to provide the necessary land in this large and little-used to meet the requirements of the Force in this Rep. Melvin R. Laird a committee said the Air Force has made survey of the United States and found the consin site was most adaptable for ICBM Laird said the Air Force's re- quest for use of the property was turned down by the Army on the grounds that it needed to keep the camp ready in case of Laird told Wilfred sistant defense AYou and I that it is not to be used as a permanent Army base at any time in the near Although Laird didn't name Camp he was referring to that Camp McCoy now is used chiefly as a site of summer training by units of the National Guard and Army John W. special assistant o the Secretary of said he matter was reviewed at the highest level between the ary of the Army and the tary of the Air Laird seems to me that he Secretary of Defense was not aggressive in pursuing this Under questioning by Air Col. William were very much enthused the prospects of this site at ne The report icse highly essential programs we ee an outstanding example of the of the Defense nent to require the service to use xisting facilities which are located for a pick Dipped in Sudan CAIRO travelers today from Khartoum aid an coup as attempted in Sudan in the st few It apparently was by the Sudanese Sudan is on Egypt's southern Details of the could not Egypt's government controlled iddie East News Agency d in a Khartoum dispatch ay the commander of the army had ordered all rs to remain at On July 19, the United Arab Re- Foreign Ministry dis- the Sudan government had dered the ouster of the Embassy counsellor in Aly alleging he had en- gaged in suspicious Sudan's Premier Abdullah il is violently The two countries long have been especially since dan gained independence Jan. ending joint Now they are involved In a new row over damming the wa- ters of the whose upper reached are controlled by the he would make no prediction on a quitting Sen. Everett Dirksen of the Senate's assistant GOP said Eisenhower was told the House could clean up its work Aug. 9. Knowland said if all goes well the Senate could make a smv Eisenhower Him far has for no special legislation bearing on the Middle East Sen. Mike Mansfield of assistant Democratic predicted early Senate action possibly today on a resolution urging permanent establishment of a United Nations police force to keep the peace in the Middle East. Sen. John Sparkman is sponsor of the which by the Senate For- eign Relations A lar resolution is pending in the Sparkman said the intent is to strengthen the hand of Secretary State Dulles in asking the U.N. General Assembly to establish such a McClellan Home to Bury His Last Son LITTLE Ark. Grief-stricken Sen. John lan came home to Arkansas day to await the burial of his youngest victim of a plane crash that killed three other McClellan made another ful journey from Washington nine years He came then for the reburial of a soldier son who died overseas and his second son died of auto wreck injuries on the day of the James Howard 30, i DEFIANT NASSER Gamal Abdel president of the United Arab is shown as he made his fiery speech to a huge crowd in Cairo Tuesday on the sixth anniversary of Egypt's Seated behind bun are some of the members of the new Iraqi Nasser de- clared that U. S. forces in Lebanon and British forces in Jordan be Little Rock the 62-year-old senator's third on- ly remaining The Arkansas Democrat re- the news of the fatal crash just after he had been in the ate chamber voting on an ment to the Reciprocal Trade Act The younger a Little Rock was at the of a plane owned by a Little Rock flying A flier since his Air Force service in the Korean he was ing a test for a pi- lot's Killed with McClellan were in- Wallace Denman 57, and Jesse Ralph 32, both of Little and Harold K. 33, who planned to take his ex- amination after Has A Head for Trouble ST. LOUIS ifl Aubry 53, dropped his pipe Tuesday night and the fire de- had to be called The pipe didn't start a As Newman reached for he fell forward and jammed his head between two iron bars in a porch Firemen pried the bars apart and freed He found his Hammarskjold Building Up U. N. Observers By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED Secretary General Dag Ham worked today to rein lorce the U. N. observer corps ir Lebanon so American troops ca pull Hammarskjold Job o after the second veto -in four days Security Council efforts to eas he Middle East The Coun cil adjourned indefinitely to awai the secretary general's action an the outcome of negotiations for summit meeting on the Middl East. The United Stales and suggested that the summit meet ing proposed by Soviet Premier Khrushchev be held within th hut the Soviet govern ment opposed the Its news paper Izvestia knows the U.S.A. rely on a mechanical majority in the Securi ty Izvestia also scoffed at tht pos ibility that Chiang whose Nationalist Chinese govern ment is a Council migh Khrushchev had meet with the government chiefs of the United France and India and with Hammarskjold indicated he would ask U.N. members for more men to build up the observer group so they might make it sible for the United States to draw its troops from anon. shall use all opportunities of- to the secretary general to and develop the group as to give it all the cance it can he told the will forgive rne for being able to spell at this what it may mean be- yond The 85th Soviet veto defeated a Japanese resolution calling on the U.N. make possible the of United States forces from by arranging to protect that country's territorial integrity and political This protection was the purpose Washington announced for landing Marines in Lebanon July 15, the day after the Iraqi monarchy was overthrown by supporters of ident Nasser opposes the pro-Western Lebanese SPEAKS Assassinate Jordan Nasser Hints By WILLIAM L. RYAN Jordan Abdel Nasser proclaimed himse a man of peace virtually called for the assassina of King Hussein of It first time Nasser pe sonally has suggested assassin Summit Par ley Last Thing Ike Wants WASHINGTON Next an outbreak of the one thin Ihe Eisenhower administrate least wants just now is a summ conference either inside or the United But an effort to preserve U.S unity and avoid a repet ion of the costly division of 1956 during the Suez crisis has force the President to take a positio where Premier Nikita seems to have the last word o whether or not there will be President and Sei of State Dulles both y according to the word ome of their top that thi s no time for a top-level mee ng on the Middle and tha ie U.N. Security Council in with all its i 0 place for calm discussion o ic Administration officials said to ay there are several reasons why summit meeting is highly inad isable 1. Khrushchev is in the position an accuser and the tales of defender in the disputi ver the causes and the of American ani military intervention ii he Middle East. From the U.S oint of this is an upside own one that puts this at a great disadvantage n trying to deal with the politica nd propaganda interests at stake 1 any highly publicized meeting 2. There in the U.S. govern two real villains in le Middle East They an and Egypt's bdel The State Depart is convinced they intend to everything possible right now nd in the future to foment as ueh trouble as they can governments in the Diddle East. TO ACT ON OWN Sec. Gen. Dag ing Tuesday at the U. N. after Reds vetoed the Japanese mise plan to substitute a bigger U. N. force for the American troops in announced he will act on his own to beef up the unarmed U. N. observer team already in At right is Colombia's Alfonso Security Council tion for the Jordanian though his of the propaganda radio station has done so The President of the United Arab in his annual Egyptian Independence Day called expressly on the people of Nablus and the main Palestinian towns in Jordan to his Nasser pointedly to the late King Hussein's and to the year 1951 in which Abdullah was ed by Arab He Hussein of following in his grandfather's footsteps by calling on Britain for Nasser's however in- could not possibly be lost on his is in line for his grandfather's call for peace and we make every effort to strengthen this said But there was no hint of compromise in his assertion that British armed aggression against Jordan will be defeated the American armed aggression against Lebanon will Should Nasser call now for dis- cussions on the Lebanese and Middle East the West might be justified in con- he is seeking only ng space in which to prepare for his next There are already signs that the is getting Nablus and other cities in the sector of Jordan are patiently There are rous check points on the road rom and so far ment security forces seem to have matters under But there are reports the ments have arms waiting or the signal for The signal may be some time in Nasser's speech indicated he is first in getting the Americans out of Lebanon ushing that country into his alled The one of his speech gave the im- ression he does not want to bite ff too much at one He still must digest the situation in nd still must deal with the on he created in Lebanon which rought American It begins to look as if it will be long time before the Americans nd British can withdraw troops om the Middle East. The rawal might be a signal for a ew Nasser WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST Winona and Vicinity Partly and a little warmer this and Thursday cloudiness occasional bowers or thundershowers and not change in High iis afternoon 89, low tonight 65, gh Thursday 86. LOCAL WEATHER Official observations for the 24 ending at 12 m. 84; 61; 80; AIRPORT WEATHER Central Max. temp. 07 at 4 p.m. min. temp. 68 at 8 a.m. noon 82; skies lity 12 wind from the west at 10 miles per 29.92 1. humidity 55 per cent Accuse U. S. Of Blocking 5-PowerTalk By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON Moscow objected sharply today to Western suggestions a U.N. summit meeting to discuss the Middle East but stopped short of saying Premier Khrushchev would not The suggestions were made in varying forms yesterday in Western individual re- plies to Khrushchev's own tion for a summit meeting outside the United The initial Moscow reaction came in a commentary by tht government newspaper which said that the U.S.A. can rely on a cal majority in the Security commentary broadcast by Moscow radio also accused this country of trying to prevent conference Khrushchev But it did hot rule out Soviet acceptance of the Western In advance of U.S. officials said they expected Khrushchev to but to conditions which the United States and iti allies may find The Izvestia commentary one that they had pated the possible participation in such a meeting of President Chiang of Nationalist The Soviet Union is a strong supporter of Communist The separate notes they sent Khrushchev last night showed that President Prime ister Harold Macmillan of Britain and French Premier Charles dt Gaulle themselves were badly di- vided on the issue of a Eisenhower is reluctant to be- come involved in of sion with Khrushchev at this His by several toughly worded para- that he considers the viet Communist leader to be be- hind much of the turmoil and trouble In the Middle East. But pressure from Eisenhower told chev that if a Security Council meeting involving presidents and premiers and foreign ministers generally toe ed States would join in following that orderly Administration officials said there was no doubt that if other government chiefs all agreed that they wanted a summit session in the Security the President personally would under heavy sure from the opposition British Labor party to go to a summit was much stronger in his He told would certainly be ready to attend such a meeting if you would also go and I take it from the terms of your 19) sage that you It was in that message that Khrushchev suggested an gency summit meeting at Geneva or elsewhere of the United the Soviet Franci and Disguised FBI Agent Catches Extortionist Wis. an FBI agent dressed as a woman providing the a 23-year-old Portage man stepped into a lice trap Tuesday and was ed on a federal charge of at- tempted Taken into custody was a man identified by the FBI as James John who carried a caliber pistol but offered no re- sistance when confronted by cers who had been hiding in wait in an abandoned farm who had designated the house as a payoff had fired several shots at the structure be- fore After being held most of tht day in the Columbia County jail Pape was taken Tuesday night to the Dane County jail in Madison where a warrant sued by U. S. Dist. Atty. Francis Portage police said Pape admitted trying to extort from a Portage woman on a threat of injury to her Riley said Pape called the woman's house Monday night and instructed her to leave the money at the She ob- the funds from a bank and turned it over to an FBI while dressed as a placed it in the The FBI and local police declined to nami the intended victim or her The officials the second formed by Daniel agent In charge of the Milwaukee FBI said Pape had not been charged day night in connection with tbt previous  

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