Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - May 12, 1960, Winona, Minnesota FAIR Warmer Friday WINONA DAILY NEWS RISES SETS NEW MOON MAY 25 105th of Publication MAY 12, 1960 SEVEN CENTS PER COPY U.S. Flier Charged With Spying Against Russians Penalty Ranges From 10 Years To Execution LONDON Pilot Francis Powers has been charged with espionage and Premier Khrushchev has shall try him severely as a This was reported today by the Soviet news agency The penally for espionage in the Soviet Union ranges from 10 years in prison to execution by a firing The latest developments were announced in Tass broadcasts from Moscow in the wake of the news conference Khrushchev held Wednesday at the Moscow exhibit of espionage articles which the Soviets say Powers carried when he was downed May 1. Part of Western dispatches on the news conference had been held up in Moscow The Tass account of Khrushchev's remarks was ried from Moscow 20 hours after the news conference took The Tass version carried this exchange between correspondent and the Soviet Q. Will this plane incident in- fluence Soviet public opinion when Eisenhower comes to A. would not like to be in Eisenhower's I would not like to answer the questions which might be put to him when be comes to Ihe Soviet I can only say the Soviet people and our public are very so there will he no But questions will be asked of course I would put it this namely US Secretary of State Christian A. has helped the President particularly in this At his press conference Herter made an Far from feeling guilty and ashamed of he justifies them and says that this will continue in the countries which are in a stale of war can act in this We are not in a state of war with These ag actions and Herter's statement are sheer Tass said Khrushchev mads following reply to the liow the plane issue could the summit those who sent Ihls spj plane think over this though they should have about the consequences before After an aggression has been committed against our conn and we shall continue routing all the aggressors who dare raise a hand against see how accurately our rocketeers shot down the plane without setting it on The pilo is the instruments in other words material evi dence is here for everyone to see These are very skillful actions o our We are grateful to them for At another Tass said Khrushchev the United Slates has no experienced a real war on its ter has not experienced air and if it wishes to unleash n we shall be compelled to fire rockets which will explode on very the territory in very first minutes of the Tass gave no indication when Powers would be put on trial There has been some speculation in Western capitals that Sovie Premier Nikita Khrushchev migh free the flier as a propaganda gesture to demonstrate Sovie confidence in its military might President at his news conference Wednesday pointed up the difficulties the United States would face in doini anything effective to assist Pow cry He said would be an matter there and we would have to do it with the permission Ihe other The agency said 3D year-old former test pilot from told plead guilty to the fact tha I flew over Soviet territory an over given points indicated on the route of the The had been expected since the Soviet in note to United States Tues day protesting the said th flier would he to ac count under Die laws of the So viet Powers was captured nea in the central WO miles easl of He ha been brought to the Soviet capita but so far the Soviets have no granted a U. S. Embassy for an interview wilh NO GRATITUDE Colo. street supervisor found a car almost buried in snow drift and summoned a wreck cr to pull it As the car was raised on chains popped two The coupl was more than slightly because Starr had disturbed thei 241'2 Delegates Already Tied o Kennedy POSING AND TALKING President Eisenhower talks with Sen. Everett Dirksen of the Senate minority as he poses with a group of GOP senators after al the White House in In center background is Sen. Roman L. Hruska of talking lo reported the President is optimistic about the Paris summit conference despite American spy Weather Balloon Rises 27 Miles An weather balloon ft ar aoon sent aloft by the Army Signal has achieved a night time aH tude record of feet more than 27 miles The Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory here said Wednesday the balloon altitude in a series balloons night altitudes he Army because cooler cause the rubber I A new rubber fabii vas tested in the April launchings The fabric is a highly elastic of developed jointly by he Signal Ihe Air Force and the Corp. of Pater The unmanned weigh ng seven pounds and measuring seven feet in diameter at launch expanded to 70 feet in dia meter just before it burst at Federal Wheat Program Will Be Extended WASHINGTON tary of Agriculture Ezra Tall acting under requirements of law Wednesday took steps to ex- lend the widely criticized federal wheat program on the 1961 The program provides for age allotments totalling 55 million farm marketing quotas based on the allotments and price at 75 per cent of parity or about at year's rate of 51.77 a The actual 1961 rate will be announced Parity is standard for uring farm prices declared by law to be fair to farmers in relation to prices charged The Eisenhower has appealed to Congress for a new program because the present one has failed to prevent surplus Benson had no choice but to proclaim the old Farm law requires that he act by May 15. committees in Con- gress have been considering wheat legislation but inability 0( the Re- publican administration and the Congress get gether on a measure has delayed Farm organizations selves are divided on the Department officials said there slill is time to set up a new gram for next Benson set July 21 as Ihe dale for a grower referendum on the marketing They must approved by at least two of the growers Rejection would kill the whole program for this year's crop were approved by 80 per cent. House Full of Only Pot Of Food Burning Minn. was no reflection on Austin firemen hut rather at them when they ed a Wednesday night Responding to several calls from two rigs raced lo Ihe Ed Zimmerman Seeing the kitchen apparently engulfed in the firemen laid m feet oi prepared to be greeted by a wall of Instead they found a simmering pot of food afire on the electric slove in Ihe family's absence The shiny keille reflected small fire onto Ihe kitchen walls and magnifying it in the process. said fireman Bob Cole as he turned off the burner Capt. said whatever was burned in the was loo far gone identification It carried a small weather probe hat radioed back temperature and wini Al the record the lem was 22 degrees beloi zero atmospheric pres sure was 1.6 to al sea and the wind was 80 miles a The project was under the rection of Leon P. Panak an Moses Sharenow of the labora lory's meteorological system The same lorm in Feb ruary 1959 set the daytime record of Car Man Killed Minn. Robert W. 30, Fairfax was killed early when hi car overturned along Highway 7 a mile north of Officers said the car lefl Hi right side of Ihe came bac spun skidded 380 fee Ihen went off the left side of th highway struck an Wagner's neck broke when he wa thrown to the back window of th car and was bounced back inl the driver's His first on highways in lour raised th traffic toil In 114 com wilh 166 at this lime year WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST and Vicinity cloudiness and warmer I night and Low tonight 4 high Friday 75. LOCAL WEATHER Official for the 24 hours ending at 12 m. 67; 43; 6.5; AIRPORT WEATHER Temp. 61 at 11 a.m. max. 66 al 4 p.m. Wednesday temp. 42 at 5 a.m. skies visibility is miles nn barometer 30.07 humidity 40 you know ths bon like you to TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Winner Needs 761 for Nomination WASHINGTON John Kennedy leads presidential hopefuls with 1.7 per cenl of the convention otes needed for Kennedy has 24U't convention in 15 according to The winner f Ihe nomination must have 761. Kennedy's total does not reflect is victories in Tuesday's West and Nebraska primaries liose two stales have a total ol I But primary re- ults are not binding on The Kennedy total includes five ctes in Utah anc Dakota that switched to im out of the column of Sen. H. Humphrey quit Ihe race after Ken defeated him in West Vir The real switch from 37 unofficial vole lo al before Wesl Virginia has been voles lo Adlai Stevenson Nevada and North Dakota ionic of Ihe 37 merely switches o Much of the strength had been ex- lo go to un- if Humphrey make it. Taking into account primary and state convention plus irst ballot preferences obtained n Associated Press the un- Democratic vole lineup stood Kennedy 2411z, Sen. Lyndon B. of Texas 67, Sen. Stuart Symington of Stevenson 5, others 14, Uncommitted 767 3ul of total convention vole of The Republican National With 666 needed to Vice President Richard M. on has 442, Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona 29, and 201 are un- committed for a total of 672 gates out of to be The GOP has only Plane Shot Pilot Killed in Cuba HAVANA A light plane was shot down early today on the way west of Havana and its pilot was reported Officials said he was attempting fly counter revolutionaries out of The U.S. Border Patrol at Mi- identified the pilot as Matthews Edward Duke who re- cently was listed among 29 airmen to whom plane rental agencies were not lo rent aircraft under any The distributed to air ports and others in the aviation was designed to prevent unauthorized over Duke previously lived al Palm the patrol said hut his present address is not The incident occurred near the Cuban Naval Academy at Mariel IS miles west of the Naval were reported to have spotted Hie plane flying in the vi of the academy and ed it when it landed on the high They said the pilot attempted to lake off but tie was shot down Cuban officials said he was fly ing a plane wilh U.S. registry Havana Radio said four men and one woman were arrested at the scene and all were from Cuban All were de scribed as In Son's Death MILWAUKEE Mrs. ginia a 27-year-old was charged homicide by reckless Conduct Wednesday in connection with the of Ike Reluctant to Cancel Russ Trip DUTCH TREAT Costumed townsfolk Ignored leaden skies and topcoat weather in scrubbing streets lo open the 3lsl annual Tulip Sen. Kennedy Starts Drive In Maryland WASHINGTON This is he day Sen. John F. Kennedy meets Maryland people and New York politicians in his revved up campaign for the presidential Still not over his West Virginia Massachusetts set out today on a of shopping ters in two Maryland counties just outside the District of His .To pile uji many voles as possible in the May 17 Maryland But the Kennedy timetable will send him flying lo New York night for a meeting of slate leaders A campaign aide confidently ts the dy already has more than 100 of Ihe 114 independently cast voles of the New York delegation at the July nominating convention in Los Kennedy's for New York mark break in a day grind aimed at nailing down 24 voles in where he -is opposed by Sen. Wayne Morse He this phase of campaign on Ihe shore of famed Chesa where he delivered a sometimes distinctly low-pressure speech to about 600 at historic Washington In talk Kennedy President Eisenhower's recent an that Ihe United State; this year would resume nn nuclear explosions I improve its apparatus and sys terns for such blasts lie said thai coming weeks after the start of the Gene va Disarmament Conference one week before the Big Foil summit this announce ment was Time Festival at Mich. Gov. G. nen Williams joined the scrubbers before some opening day her The scalded and bruised of the little boy was found naked in his bed early Tuesday Authorities said he died of second land third degree burns over 30 of his I Asst. said the warrant naming Mrs. Bolda was issued on the basis of a by hrr 32. an advertising agency said Bolda lold him lhal his wife had Monday night by putting him in a bathtub of hoi Mrs. Bolda if held observation at a Rockefeller Dead At 86 in Arizona wi John D. Rockefeller famed philanthropist and head of one of the world's wealthiest died in a Tucson Wednesday at Ihe age of 8fl. Death was attributed to pneumonia and heart A great humanitarian who abhorred Rockefeller poured millions of dollars into welfare and cultural projects around No estimate of his personal for- tune was but his known gifts totaled more lhan 350 lion New Ulm Voters Reject School Bonds NEW down a school bond here Tuesday for Ihe second limi in two The vote for a tary school building proposal was 1.417 Two weeks ago a bond issue was defeated by 212 That proposal included future plans I for a new high officials withhold announcement plans for a new election pending Furious Fiddling Violinist Loses Bow SANTA Calif. -A Cleveland Symphony tra violinist played Tschaikovsky Tschaikovsky So furiously did lhal his bow flew from his hand into the audience. A retrieved it and ed it back before the Filly phony sot more than a few bars Tuesday Once looked upon by fellow cap- as a Rockefeller also was a pioneer in urging ler conditions and an eight-hour day for the American Early in his long before era of public feller was has never had its just It should not be obliged to fight for what is its just Capital should be on Ihe alert lo find out what is equitable and see that labor gets In bis as in his business Rockefeller lowed the footsteps of his founder of the Standard Oil upon which Ihe family's great wealth is The total gifts of Ihe lers is conservatively at more lhan one billion This docs not include interest on endowments financing such as Ihe Rockefeller General Education Board and Rockefeller for Medical Rockefeller graduated from Brown University in 1897 with a Phi Beta Kappa key for scholastic attainment and immediately went to work for his He was no to hard In his split raked mended fences for 15 cents an Painstaking practice on his lin him 5 cents an Rockefeller once father used to say lhal one of the ways lo make ey was to save it. We children were brought up to regard waste as almost a In 1901, Rockefeller married Greene daughter of U.S. Sen. Nelson W. Aldrich ol Rhode They had six daughter and five sons John D. and Worker Killed At La Crosse LA Wis. u workman was killed and two ers were injured today when a new compressor blew lip while being tested al Ihe Co. Killed was Howard 29, of La who was testing unit under the blew off. The 20-fool-high ceiling of the room was damaged and oilier fragments of the machine landed 70 feet Court Orders North Central to Serve 3 Cities WASHINGTON The U.S. Court of Appeals today upheld a Civil Aeronautics Board order North Central Airlines serve and Marshfield and on its route 86, The CAB ordered In serve Ihe four as an out growth ol an investigation into scr vice in seven midwest The court said CAB had right to decide what be served in area in which an airline court North Central had a one time expressed a willingness lo serve the four The court said record in In case justified conclusions o the CAB in ils of routes and segments of routes objected t by Two Dead in Farm Mishaps By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two farm accidents th lives of two one of them a 5-year-old The Larry diei when he while trying t board his father's truck in th family farmyard al Corcoran i rural Arthur sai Larry nnd 4. his had been riding with him in Ih cab of tbo truck as he hauled fee to pig He said his son go tired of riding and left the ca and he was not aware of his cl foil lo climb The hoy dird in a about 3 an hour Iho He had been run over by Ihe dual rear Second death was lhat of Kelwin 62. rural who fell Ihe lie was riding and Ihen was run over by it. the victim's found his father critically hurt afler seeing Ihe tractor traveling in circles about Ihe field The elder died in a pital The mishap occurred en the son's farm a mile of NO COFFEE ATLANTA Lfl You've heard those stories about short bankers Will Go Unless Invitation Is Withdrawn WASHINGTON Eisenhower was quoted as saying today he still plans lo visit the viet Union next month unless viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev withdraws the Arch Moore of West ginia said Eisenhower told him and a group of other House Re- publican members lhat if chev docs decide to pull back the invitation all right wilh Eisenhower's views were ed against the background of Khrushchev's suggestion that the President might not be because of the American spy piano Moore and several other GOP hart breakfast with nt the While Moore quoted Eisenhower as aying further that the 10 days now is scheduled to spend in he Soviet Union be utilized if the Kremlin leader bould withdraw the Eisenhower did not elaborate on Moore told In response lo a Moore aid Eisenhower made it plain he to wail for Khrushchev to iring up the matter of the Kremlin lender said day lhat he ami Eisenhower would discuss Ihe matter when they met n Paris next week for the summit For nnd other Ihs outgrowth of the U2 spy plane in- cident loomed large as an ten agenda item at Ihe ed meeting of East-West chiefs of The rising tension over the fair cast gloom on chances success nt Ihe summit parley well as shadows on Eisenhower's Soviet which has been uled for June 10-19 in return for Khrushchev's here last United was ing a formal to he sent Moscow to Tuesday's Soviet The Soviet protested May I U.S. plane flight into viel territory and threatened re- prisal for any such future tile Eisenhower told his news con- ference Wednesday that expect to to the Soviet But that was before news reports wern received here ol the Khrushchev statements which cast on the kind of welcome he would re- To newsmen inspecting Ihe ported wreckage of Ihe spy Khrushchev said Russian people would say I was mad lo welcome a man who sends spy planes over here like The spy had changed his opinion of chev and he would not likn to be in Eisenhower's shoes when the President visits the Soviet He said the two can discuss at Paris whether Eisenhower should visit Moscow as suming Eisenhower wilt make Ihe trip added there would be excesses whatsoever among the Khrushchev's words startled of- There was an sion that Ihe Soviet host was de- hanging out an Swiss Oust 2 Taken lo Lutheran Hospital Irom cuts and shock wore I At 9 a.m. onn day the chimes 47, of atop Ihe Fullon National and Turon 3D, of La j began lo ring the Day Is Switzerland Ual Switzerland expelled two viet diplomats Wednesday as The two were seized in Zurich as they went to a rendezvous wilh a double agent from whom expected to buy top-secret on Swiss defense plans and on missile launching bases in West The Soviets thought Ihe agent was spying for tbc The launching sites include Iho were U.S. be- Air Force's big intermediate range ballistic missile base al and smaller Air Korce in Ihe cm part of West The accused Soviet diplomats were described as sullen and ar- rogant from the of ar- vesl unlit lefl Ihe The Soviet Embassy confirmed their arrests but declined lo com- or give the names Ihe