Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - May 7, 1960, Winona, Minnesota CLOUDY Warmer Sunday WINONA DAILY NEWS RISES SETS FULL MOON MAY 11 105th of Publication MAY 7, SEVEN CENTS PER COPY THAT the bank you Small world I I the head PAGES Pilot of Plane Alive T Him as S BOAT FOUND CIRCLING Two Fishermen Feared Drowned at Lake City Minn. Two brothers were feared drowned morning in wind-whipped Pepin after their boat was found circling off Lake Point with all their fishing gear t The brothers are Frederick C. 23, and Glen A. 40. both of Lake Their parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Lake Frederick is a freshman at Winona Slate Col- He was graduated from Pine Island School and was born March 10, 1937. Glen is employed by a Rochester tronics They left Lake City in their 14-foot fiberglass boat shortly before 7 today to go The boat was spotted shortly after 7 a.m. with its outboard motor still Apparently Ihe boat had not tipped The boat finally went to shore about one mile downriver of Lake City Lake City Fire Chief Lloyd Boss said dragging was de- layed until the water ed Assisting tiim at the scene were from the Wabasha and department and Lake City There was speculation that one of the brothers may have fallen overboard and that the other went overboard too in an attempted Twisters Hit In Alabama By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Terrifying twisters swirled out of the darkness and struck two small communities near this the weather Bureau An unidentified eye witness quoted by the Weather Bureau at the Brookley Air Force said heard a roar and watched buildings explode in front of him on Dauphin Island Highway south of the Dog River Bridge near Unconfirmed reports said two service one grocery a skating rink and a Mason lodge were destroyed and a Baptist church badly Another twister was sighted at St. three miles west of on Highway 90 west of It marked the third straight day of death and destruction from the swirling Twenty-nine were dead and Apologize to Dutch Youths Indonesia injured from the ters that unleashed their most The Indonesian government today lers that unleashed their most savage fury on Oklahoma and Arkansas and then darted into the Mississippi Valley and Ihe Gusty hail and heavy rains also added to the wrath which counted hundreds of homes and businesses destroyed or At where 11 persons were killed and 104 in- jured by Thursday night's Gov. J. Howard Edmondson will declare it a major ter A check of community of showed 82 homes 34 heavily 22 es destroyed and two churches Wide areas of Ihe and South braced for the worst Friday during repeated lornado but damage was mercifully At in southwest a destroyed one lifted 12 others from their foundations and damaged 50 homes were damaged in areas of Dexter and Sandy In west-central Illinois and Missouri's funnel clouds but damage was Funnels also were sighted near and in Tennessee about 25 miles northeast of Mem Heavy rains and winds struck scattered areas Fri nay and Orleans was drenched with 2.35 inches of Baton Rouge got 2 1.30 and to the Netherlands for Indent raids on Dutch diplomatic in About 800 university and high c h o o 1 demonstrators Friday iroke into the headquarters and lie home of the Dutch charge d'Affaires F. A. Frowein when he called on the chief of the For- eign Office European lo protest the ore down the Dutch destroyed royal smashed up furniture and office a former Dutch col claims West New reported wind 1.04 over Two inches of rain also fell al Hi at Rockford and hail pelted central Illi In snow mixed wilh rain fell today as a cold fron extended from Ihi Great through the Plains well into dropping temperatures as much as 25 de grees from the previous 24-honi Turk's Six Tears Up Garment District NEW YORK thi blues notes and Ihe cool bouncing off the skyscrapers Ihi sound meant only one thing Dixie had come to the Up slammed out popped cart ping cullers and models jammed Manhattan's avenue and gave in lo Ihe blandishments of Turk Murphy and his The jazz group held on an open truck in a noontime session Friday to help Town Swept By Tornado Will Rebuild Okla. the town back better than So said Fred Wilburton as he arid his townsmen their Thursday night's crushing Rescue workers picked through the ruins relieved to find no more dead to acid to the II persons killed in the The Red Cross listed 104 It was one of possibly two dozen tornadoes that caused 28 deaths in eastern Oklahoma and one in central Arkansas town o A check of this million community cf showed 82 homes de 34 homes heavily dam 22 business buildings de 2 churches demol Many persons are bedded down in the high The Red Cross fed 1.500 persons in the high schoo many of them who by evening had cleaned up most of the Other towns hit hard by the tor included where where thre and Ihe where including four mem hers of one were U.S. Officials Amazed at Russian Stand Tension Between United States and Moscow Increasing By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON ials learned with amazement ay of Soviet Premier statement that an has been captured lying a spy mission across the dramatic statement by Khrushchev before the Supreme boviet seems certain lo bring urther increase in tension be- ween Moscow and But officials still discounted the that President hower would change his plans for he summit meeting or for a June to the Soviet Department press officer Lincoln While had no immediate on the Khrushchev re- The State Department pre- wanted to get its own direct from dor Llewellyn at Meg and Tony On Honeymoon By DENNIS NEELD LONDON Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Claimed by Khrushchev GUN CREW This is the crew the Soviets say shot down a U.S. plane over Russian territory Left to right arc Sgt. A. Pvt. A. Lance Cor- poral A. Pvt. V. Turkin and Pvt. B. Soviet Premier Khrushchev said today the plane's Francis G. was alive and had confessed to being on a spy via radio from I Officials also clearly wanted o go over Khrushchev's account n some Eisenhower and Secretary itate Christian A. Herter are final decisions on the next U.S. move in the until they get a better picture from Moscow of the plane They want to see how chev follows up his statements Thursday that the plane had heen shot down and today that the pilot is alive and may be tried as a Khrushchev announced sailed westward through the placid waters of the English Channel todav bound for a sunshine honeymoon in Ihe Caribbean To the customary signal from Channel shore royal yacht Britannia carrying Princess Margaret and her commoner husband flashed back the reply of British sea day that an American plane had been shot down early Sunday morning because it violated viet air space in southern He cited this as an exam pie of what he called American An unarmed U. S weather plane based in Turkey has been missing since Sunday Khrushchev also attacked hower for saying he might have Vice President Rjchard M. Nix on substitute for him in at the summit conference if Ihe meeting lasts more than a The con is scheduled to open it Paris May IS. The violence of the propaganda blast at the United Stales startled officials here even provoked some suggestions that the Presiden ought to change his Eisenhower himself speculation Friday about his sched uled Soviet visit when he of taking a boat as a present t Khrushchev he made Ihe to Wildcat Strikes Sweep Belgian Congo Destination unknown high I Left in Auto 111j j to a medical fund raising Tony's dark blue Then ship closed its radio j for Nearly Dehydrated the West Indies but no port of call has been speculation favored which Margaret has visited before and was warmly greeted as Ihe Others suggested Hie might swing northward and call al a U.S. Gulf such as Orleans or Ihe Florida The Admiralty refused 16 Behind Ihe princess was a ding day of forgotten magnificence and It was a day of smiles and the thundering cheers of close on two million excited Britons for their favorite princess and the man of her An estimated 250 million people throughout Britain and Western cither watched or heard Ihe solemn Anglican wedding mony Friday in Westminster Abbey on radio or They saw a danling bride in a wedding gown of purest while and 3 handsome diffident and sometimes first man without a title lo marry an English princess in 450 The finally waved goodbye to London as Ihe cleared Tower Bridge over Ihe As they waved garet was seen in one of her first wifely confetti from Nuclear Tests To Be Resumed Pa. Eisenhower announced oday the United Stales will re- sume underground nuclear possibly by end of the James C. White House press said Ihe tests will involve the use of de- But he did not rule out Ihe any knowledge gained may military Tht Eisenhower made after Hagerly had with the President at his farm also disclosed plans for a expansion of current research am development an capability to detect and identify underground nuclear The statement said 10 millior dollars is earmarked for this pur pose in the budget for the fisca year ending June 30 and that it is anticipated about 66 million dol lars more will be needed in the next fiscal Hagerty said that of this tota Eisenhower plans to ask lo assign million in new money lo the Atomic Energy Com Hagerty said the remaining 3.T, million will come from a new dis of Defense Airmen and Rescuers Saved From Crash Site KINGSLKY AIR BASE Air Wildcat strikes lwo who BOSTON employes today were credited with saving a 6-weeks-old child from possible serious quences after spotting her inert form in a locked Dennis Kennedy and Ralph Long broke into Ihe car Friday and brought the child into Memorial Animal Hospital the child was transferred Boston City Hospital where Doctors said she suffered from near dehydration Doctors said the child recovered quickly with a The parked car was in the direct rays of the sun and the hire in the car was in Ihe police The baby's by police as Mrs. Joseph Conning 25, hospital for vas delayed longer than she ex- lo Employment Study Group Set in Senate WASHINGTON A manent Senate group to shirty em- ployment problems and related was established Friday wilh Sen. Jennings Randolph as Members in- clude Sen. Norman Brunsdale swept the Belgian Congo Ihe Negro colony moved closer to independence June 30. Congo political leaders called on Belgian authorities to help end the walkouts and halt tribal riots that have been spreading through the vast The rail line linking lo the southern of Katanga was blocked by railroad workers de- manding pay boosts of four to five limes their present WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST Winona and Vicinity Partly cloudy slow wanning as said she was in a nearby 3S for postnatal care and 40: and Sunday wilh High afternoon 65, low 40, high Sunday 70. LOCAL WEATHER Official observations Ihe 24 hours ending al 12 in. 33; 40; AIRPORT WEATHER Max. temp. 44 al 9 a.m. at 8 p.m. at visibility more lhan 15 wind from northwest al 20 humidity 55 lowan Queen of U Day Ann Marie of Mason a nursing al St. Mary's in was crowned queen of Iho annual Day al Ihe University a Draft Dodger Kennedy Disavows Slap at Humphrey W. Va. m Sen. John F. Kennedy disavowed Friday night a statement by one of his top campaign Franklin D. Roosevelt that Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey draft deferments in World War who hnd a distinguished war record as a naval officer a patrol boat sunk by the Japanese in lite issued i statement discussion of the war record of Sen. Humphrey was done wilhout my knowledge and consent and I disapprove of the injection of this issue Ihe Humphrey did not serve in the armed He has he disqualified by a Car Plunges Into La Crosse 15, Drowns By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The deaths of three persons in separate accidents have raised thi Wisconsin highway loll lo 221 Earlier In the Roosevelt had charged that Humphrey had a number of deferments rom military service and crs had been written for him ng he was a political whose services were needed in Roosevelt added that Humphrey was turned down by the naval re- serve in July 1844 wilh no reason And he when the draft board was an- other appeal was made describing Humphrey as representing a essential industry with 85 Humphrey was inducted in 1945, Roosevelt but was then turned down as 411' because of a you call Sen. Humphrey a draft a reporter I've never said lhal and I never meant Roosevelt did not use lhat record speaks for he whole emphasis on Sen. Kennedy's war he went any man who known war recognized Ihe son's 70, and Ihe necessity for It is also of sible a man who was not in were the service could realize the 21, was killed early lodny whe his car veered out of control an But in a brief statement issued j struck a tree on the tar by Kennedy veil i more than on day a yea A 75-year-old La Crosse man Herman drowned when lie was trapped in his ca after it plunged 40 feel down a embankment into 10 feet of wale in Swift Creek in La Mrs. Maymie 61, died Friday when Ih car in which she was a and a truck collided o Highway 59 west of Eagle in Way kesha Authorities said tw men in the truck drove away promising to get Mrs. Me By PRESTON GROVER MOSCOW A U.S. pilot whose jet waj shot over the Soviet Union day has admitted he was on a spying mission and may face trial as a Premier Nikita chev announced The pilot is Francis G. 30, of Va. Khrushchev told the Supreme or Powers had escaped by parachute when a Soviet racket wrecked his plane as it was speeding across the viet Union with camera graphing airfields and industrial a height of more 12 He landed and Ihe Powers was described by the remier as a former U.S. Air orce pilot who joined the Central Agency in 195G. said he was en roule a U.S. base in Pakistan to a S. base in Norway when his lane was downed near in the His assignment was was to check n the and U.S. Stale Department aid Powers was a civilian test litot for Lockheed Aircraft and his jot was an weather observation plans missing since it look olf lasl day from Khrushchev said Powers carried i silenced a a currencies of the Soviet West Italy and other countries and a suicide kit which lie never Khrushchev said a news might be organized to display hose and other which said included two gold watches in addition to Power's own and gold bracelets for also thought il would be right to pul the pilot on he Khrushchev told a Parliament he had de- announcing the capture of the pilot lo expose whal be called fabrications in the can version of the has cast a cloud over Ihe Rig Four summit conference opening in Paris May 16. have not only the ments found on the aircraft but on Page Column 7) PILOT side of Milwaukee Party lo their rescue were ferried fron a rugged northern California eras site lo base Friday The Forest Service smoke jump not leaped search plane spotted Charle Newcomer ami James of Travis Air Force Calif beside Their light plane had gone SO miles cast of Calil in nn area almost by The smoke jumpers and the two Air Force men cleared a A piloted by Robert Collum flew all four Newcomer and were is an taken to a base dispensary in able and dedicated public nrs for the November general good he do nol feel importance in campaign and j I regret that il has been Alabama iulo an i In his own statement ating himself from the references lo Humphrey's lack of Kennedy asserted lhal Ihe contest in state's primary Tuesday should be settled strictly on the issues facing the nation III r I know Sen. Humphrey is an filed its stole of presidential Ala. voters don't like tl presidential choices of the Dem crats or Republicans this yea they can support Prohibits Party The antiliquor parly has in Alabama and Friday WIFE OF PILOT Mrs. Francis G. whose a civilian test was shot down by Soviet Premier Khrushchev says Powers may be tried as a AP Snowplows Out in Wisconsin River Towns tor Flooding By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Snowplows worked among the dandelions Friday as an- other spring slorm hammered leaving snow and slush covered highways in Ihe north and streams in many Athletic events were washed basements were flooded al and Menasha a sewer backup threatened to create n The lell in Jackson and Monroe counties where the Slate Traffic Patrol said Highways 12 and 51 were and in area the trol said snowplows were ed into The Mississippi River rose steadily Friday the ram continued through Ihe two boats sunk be- cause they lo docks with ropes too short to allow them lo rise wilh Ihe There was some flooding and basements al ville where 3.GO inches of rain was measured by The River Darlington was rising but still within its The U. S. Weather Bureau at Minneapolis warned lhal the Wisconsin River would 12.5 feet today at Merrill flood stage is 11 The river was expected to rise to 0.5 feet downstream at consin Rapids where flood Magr is 12 The rain fall al Merrill Friday was 3.5 In where two of rain fell in 24 water spilled out of some crocks lo block especially on Ihe South Hundreds of basements were sewers al anil were Illicit ly lo capacity by Ihe runoff of Ihe Arnold ol the sewage plant serving both said continued rain would create an Mayor Chester in a radio asked dents to limit their use of wa- ter in an effort to reduce the burden on the sewer mains and treatment Bell that if the rain ued il might bo necessary to shut off valves in disposal and wilh no place for the runoff lo basements would be flooded by has bad a sewer vey under but it has been hampered by recurring