In The End All You Really Have Is Memories 23/Jamestown NY Post Journal... · Arabia and the little...
Transcript of In The End All You Really Have Is Memories 23/Jamestown NY Post Journal... · Arabia and the little...
WEATHER
Cool today through Tuesday with rain.
or wet snow
• • VOL. XV, No. 174
Jamestown Post-Journal • I . i — — w — — • — - - • '• • - ' • '• y
Twenty-Six Pages JAMESTOWN, N.Y., MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1956 Price Six Cents
WIRE SERVICES: Associated Press with 3 trunk wires (3 Wire Photos
JOI BNAL 1M6; POST 1MI THE PUST-JTOUBSAL 1MI
Arab-British Trouble Likely
They Came to Life at L.T. Beaux Arts Ball inn— wk ••"•—i 1 1 I W I > — •inn • — — » — — —•" n ^ p p — — — — — — — — ••• ii ii • — — ^ w — •
Mountain Boys Step Out Of Comic Page to Win Prize
New Military Pact1
Expected to Bring More Disagreement
By WILTON WYNN CAIRO, Egypt tfk—The Arabian
Peninsula "Land, of 'the Toligafe Sultans" looks like the next major battleground in the cold war between the Arabs and the British*
Signing of a new military alliance Saturday by Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the little desert kingdom of Yemen promises trouble in the sandy s t r e t c h of land around the rim of the Arabian Peninsula. That strip forms The last stronghold of direct British
'control in the entire Arab world. Aroupd this perimeter are nu
merous sheikhs :and sultans who in theoryjtre as soverign as Queen Elizabeth ""II but whose "independence" depends almost entirely on treaties of protection with Britain.
Frontiers Poorly Defined Their desert frontiers rarely are
well defined,* and the British-backed rulers recently have come increasingly into c o n f l i c t with their larger neighbors to the north—Saudi Arabia and" Yemen.
Yemen's conflict with Britain renters mainly around I he Aden protectorates — 30 "independent"* states jammed into the 100-mile-width of the peninsula's southwest corner between Yemen's southern frontier and the Indian Ocean.
Some of these s u 11 a n.s and sheikhs live on .as little as $10 a month, derived largely from the tolls -they charge on camel caravans plodding through their road-less domains. Trie inevitable toll-gate, a dirty mud-hut village andi possibly a Beau Geste type for-i tress with mud walls often constitute the entire populated area! of the sultan's domain.
Lonely British agents, many of i them, the only Europeans in the"' area, act-as the link between the sultans and the British govern-. ment with only a few locally raised troops for protection.
From his ' i s o l a t e d mountain kingdom where time has stood still since the Arabian Nights, Imam (Sulta.nl Ahmed of Yemen for year& has maneuvered1 to end the British domination of the protectorates, which Yemen claims.
Fighting for Decades Sporadic border fighting be
tween 'Yemen tribesmen and the Aden sultans has gone on for decades.
Recently the Yemenites have stepped up their campaign,to get the British out, spurred by British plans to weld the numerous Aden protectorates into one federation. Ahmed fears that would produce a single state powerful enough rival his own.
Ahmed also is disturbed by reports Britain has granted an oil concession on the Red Sea island of Kamaran, which Aden also claims.
In its anti-British maneuvers Yemen has tightened old bonds with Saudi Arabia, whose King Saud himself has a border 'feud with the British-backed rulers in Oman and the Buraimi oasis, on the southeast of the peninsula.
The Yemenite-Saudi cbmbina-
Paul Webbs famous comic panel. "The Mountain Boys" which for years has been a feature of Esquire, and which has been a member of The Post-Journal comic strip family only two weeks, walked off with the grand prize at the Little Theater's Beaux Arts
j Ball "in Hotel Jamestown Saturday night. The ten couples who spent.
I weeks in acquiring authentic cos-jtumes, even to the beards that cover the mouths, were enthusi-j astic participants in the parade of j comic strip characters that includ-1 ed scores of different subjects.
The Mountain Boys group came J onto the floor with all kinds ofj props, including an outhouse onj wheels, fully equipped even to a
j Sears-Roebuck catalogue, and the [boys' had their little brown jugs I and even a shotgun for emergen-!eies—had there been any.
Mrs. Jean Horan, general chairman, today thanked her several committees and scores of workers
[Who have been working for months on hundreds of details to ensure the success of the venture. Proceeds go to the Theater's Building I tired workers can look back on Fund. The one detail of decorating monumental effort but it will be
Adlai Says Ike Misleading on World Situation
. Contends Forbign Affairs Worsi Than 3 Years Ago
misleads a cautiously the present
the ballroom with hundreds of pennants, balloons, cleverly drawn caricatures of famous comics, Christmas tree lights that entirely circled the ballroom and other decorations not only took countless hours of work by many hands but
paring the ballroom for the party. The comic strip characters can
now go back to their pages in the newspapers and magazines and the
a a
who for the
and the jenhower in backhanded
the Presi-
long time before those who attended to fill the ballroom will forget the event. Oh yes, the Mountain Boys like Jamestown and can be found each evening in the same old spot on The Post-Journal comic page. Now turn to pages 15 and
all day Saturday was spent in pre- 17 for stories and pictures of Ball.
U.S. Testing Sincerity Of Soviet Peace Talk
Russia Must Wipe Out 'Wrongs of Stalin/ Eisenhower Tells Newspaper Editors Society
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (JP)—The Eisenhower administration
is developing* its own test of the widely advertised peaceful purposes behind Russia's new look foreign policy.
The heart of the challenge a s * defined by President Eisenhower is that Russia's leaders should wipe out the "wrongs of Stalin" ( which he said sti I prevail a g a i n s t \ P Q f g r i f c $ O V £ t d
i2 Buffalo Boys,
other nations, lie said those wrongs include the division of Germany and Korea, the European satellite regimes and the uncer-1
tainty of peace in Asia. Eisenhower laid out his ideas on
Soviet relations in a speech before the annual dinner of the American Society of Newspaper Editors Saturday night.
In an off-the-cuff addition to his prepared speech, he listed a series of what he termed "cold war victories ** He said he doesn't believe anyone knows who is winning the cold war. but added that those who say the West is winning "can point to some facts rather than
to | merely allegations." He proposed creation of a sort
of brain trust to advise the government on* foreign policy—a "rotating advisory board" of private citizens, he called it.
At the* same time he renewe his appeal for a long-range U.S foreign aid program, an issue now pending before Congress. He said that as a former colonial subject of the British Empire, the United States understands and respects the views of nations more recently free and accepts "the right of each nation to choose its own path to
future." tion scored a diplomatic victory! by bringing Egyptian Premier i t n l Carnal Abdel Nasser into their al-| Itance, "and 'Nasser in turn further ( strengthened his position as strong man of the Arab world.
tain a foreign aid program "so long as freedom is threatened and armaments are not controlled," he
In effect the new to Yemen 'the Arab has forged to counte s pan sored Ba ghdad sera* group already int and Saudi Arabia. Lik
rt ex*ended SA, >a chain Nasser the Western-Pact, Nas-"uded Syria
Syria and to Saudi Arabia, Yemen agreed
put her negligible military forces" under the over-all command-of the! Egyptian army chief, Maj.. Gen. Abdel Hakim. Amer.
Although Israel has been the chief immediate target, of Egypts'j previous Arab pacts, the latest ob-l \ iously is intended by. Nasser as \
p toward pushing die British! off the Arabian Peninsula. It gives Nasser and Saud a Yemen-! • * e thorn with which to punch at j Aden—and an excuse to move ini if Yemen gets seriously embroiled, j
But whether Nasser wants a, I showdown fight with the British j yet is riot certain. Some observers' think he will restrain his Arabian! allies
Eisenhower spoke at the conclusion of a two-week period during which he ami his advisers had been reviewing Soviet policies more intensively than usual. Participating in the restudy was U.S. Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen, due back in Moscow this week.
Furthermore. Eisenhower spoke at a time when Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin and Communist party chief Nikita Khrushchev are visiting Britain and proclaiming the Soviet peace line.
"The future alone." he said, "can show whether the Communists really want to move toward a just and stable peace."
He noted that since the death of Stalin the men who run 'the Soviet Union are operating as a collective group but "dictatorship it still remains."
From Drowning BUFFALO m ~ Two Buffalo
boys and their parents, all non-swimmers, were saved from drowning in the muddy waters of a Thru way excavation in the Town of Hamburg yesterday afternoon.
Hero of the rescue was Walter Roy Daniels. 24. of Sisson Hwy., North Collins. He managed to save all four without diving into the excavation, filled by water! 10 feet deep. #
The chain of attempted rescues started when George Tsakos, 8, j of 366 Plymouth Ave., toppled intoj the excavation, which is about! 200 yards off Dartmouth Rd. He was trying to pick up a stick on the muddy bank when he slip* ped and plunged into the water.
His brother, Andrew. 10. playing nearby, heard his cries fori help and leaped into the water. As both boys floundered andJ screamed for help, two playmates ran to a home 100 yards away j where the boy's parents were visit-ing friends.
Steven Tsakos, 58, and his wife. ] Gladys. 43, raced to the excava- j tion. Tsakos immediately dived! in and attempted to shove the 1 boys toward shore.
Mrs. Tsakos leaned over the water attempting to reach thej outstretched hand of Andrew, and tumbled in.
Their cries were heard by Dan-, iels who was completing con-j sfruction work on his new home ] nearby in Dartmouth Rd.
One by one, Daniels a construction worker, hauled the family ashore.
"I didn't want to jump In," Daniels explained, "because I thought I might do more harm than good."
He sat on the bank at the water's edge and extended his feet to Mrs. Tsakos and her husband and pulled them to the bank after they grabbed his ankles. He
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Adlai Stevenson said last night
President Eisenhowcji: the nation in taking optimistic view of world situation.
On the contrary. Stevenson said, "baffled and uncertain" leadership has left the country's foreign affairs in worse shape than when the Republicans took office three years ago.
And Sen. Estes Keifauver is vying with Stevenson Democratic nomination chance to oppose E November, used a compliment to criticise dent's Saturday night address.
Advisory Board Suggested Eisenhower, besides voicing the
optimists world view) , suggested • creation of a "retailing advisory board" of private citizens to help
: advise on foreign affairs. Kefauver agreed such a board
would be a good idea. He added, "There has been a crying need for a long time to use the most able people, regardless of party, in making and administering foreign policy."
Up to now, he said, "foreign policy has been handled on a partisan basis in this, administration."
Eisenhower's s p e j e e h to the! American Society ojf Newspaper Editors steered eleajr of attacks on the Democrats, j although he \ formally opened his campaign last! week.
He told the edifoijs they must, help keep Americans informed on the cold war struggle without "demagoguery and partisanship" and called on Russian leaders to prove by concrete acts their peaceful intentions and desires for better relations with the free world.
Stevenson took issue with Eisenhower in a television appearance. It may be tru°. he said, that danger of a shooting war hasfdiminished, but we could lose the contest with the Soviets without the Reds "firing a shot."
He said Secretary of State Dulles has "misinformed" the American people several times on world conditions.
Pa, Votes Tuesday The focal point Of interest in
tomorrow's Pennsylvania primary election will be a tejst of the relative strength of President Eisenhower and Adlai Stelvenson,
Eisenhower Is, iri effect, unopposed on the GOP side of the ballot. Sen. William FT. Knowiand of California also is listed, but only because he was unable to withdraw his name in time when Eisenhower a n n o u n c e d his candidacy.
Stevenson's namie will stand See POLITICS Page 2
S C E N E O F T R I P L E S L A Y I N G — A S t a t e Police de tec t ive hold* 22 cal. rifle wi th \ * i c h 11-year-old R o b e r t A. C u r g e n v e n sho t and killed his f a the r , m o t h e r and ]4»year-old b r o t h e r a t t h e i r f a rm home nea r Mansfield, Conn. F a t h e r ' s bodv i i* bare ly visible beside d r iveway . Mo the r was sho t t h r o u g h window a t lef
of doo 1 Farm Boy Says Family Picked on Him
Boy] II, Kills Parents, Brother
( A P Wi repho to )
Khrushchev WarnsWest On Missiles 'Never Shake Your Fist At a Russian1
B I R M I N G H A M , E n g l a n d JP—Nik i t a K h r u s h c h e v sa id today t h e Soviet U n ion wil l soon h a v e long- range gu ided miss i les capable of c a r r y i n g H-bombs and w a r n e d t h e W e s t : " N e v e r s h a k e y o u r f is t a t a R u s s i a n . "
The Soviet Communist party boss, apparently nettled by jeering crowds who met him and Premier Nikolai Bulganin here. told a Chamber of Commerce luncheon the Russians have already exploded an H-bomb from a plane and claimed Russia was the first nation to do.
"I am quite sure that we will quickly have a guided missile with a hvdrogen bomb that can fall anywhere in the world. ' Khrushchev said in a Russian-language speech as reported by the British Industries Fair, co-hosts at the luncheon.
MANSFIlLD. Conn. (.P-An 11-year-old b » . aiming awkwardly because ofwoor eyesight, shot to death his J p r e family — mother, father andBolder brother.
He told police they picked on him and m feared he would be sent to reB-m school.
Fifth-graler Robert Curgenven said he kilSd the three late Saturday aflernODn .it the 'amily's rural rome h e r ^ 3 0 miles east 6f Hart-
pt in the farmhouse hen reported the kill-igtibor Sunday morn-
ford. He that night] ings to a I ing^
One nig spanked put out h i to sleep. 1
After tej yesterday, to the stj for a 30-
Robert has poor wears gk sight the!
He tok Taylor h( rifle aft*
last week his father because he wouldn't
ledroom light and go fcbert said. Ing his story 'to police Robert was committed je hospital at Norwich fy mental examination.
built stoekily but he ;ht in his right eye and le.s. He said he had to lifle with his left eye. (tate Police L'. Harry •eloaded the .22 caliber every shot, carrying
spare bullets between his teeth. First he killed his brother, Rich
ard, Jr. He walked into the barn where Richard was milking a cow about 5:30 P.M.
"I'm going to shoot you," he told Richard. But he said Richard p a i d him no mind and snapped: "Get out of here."
When Richard resumed milking, Robert fired a shot that caught the brother in brother tlung a him and Robert fired again—hitting him in the stomach.
Robert backed out the barn door and Richard stumbled after him. Again Robert fired and again he hit him in the stomach. The brother crumpled to the ground and Robert fired the last time at his brother—a shot into the head.
Reloading, Robert went, to the farmhouse where he saw his
I mother. Beatrice, 41. through a bedroom window. He said that when she saw him aiming the rifle
;she shouted something that sound-led like "hey." Robert shot her dead with one shot, police said—
! just above the heart.
Translator Reads Speech Robert said he slammed another! \ translator read out Khrush-
round into the* rifle chamber, andi | th e v ' s speech in English sentence his father, Richard. 42. ran out i by sentence as it was being dc-of the house toward him. "HijUvered. Most Western newsmen Dad," Robert said—and fired ajhere did not hear the translator shot, that hit in the abdomen. Al-lread out the clause "that can fall though wounded, the father shout- j any where in the world." But a ed to him: . |BIF official text, based on a short-
"GiVe me that rifle." : 'hand writer's version of the oral Robert said he loaded once translation, included it. Premier
more—the last time, for the next Bulganin indicated last December the hand. The.shot caught his father in the head, the Soviets already had guided milking can at and he fell to the- ground dead, missiles capable of intercontimn-
Taylor quoted Robert as saying. ta] flights. , , he covered the bodies with blank-' Khrushchev said he had seen ets and went into the house. He people shaking fists at him and ate something and went to bed Bulganin since their arr: about 9 P.M.. but he said he 1 didn't sleep very well. He got up at 9 A.M. Sunday.
It wasn't until 11 A.M. .that he went to the home of a neighbor. John E. Powers, a placement officer at the University of Connecticut.
Powers said that at first he didn't believe the boy's story. He said he seemed quite normal and talked "in a normal way." But Powers went to the farmhouse and f/>und the three bodies.
Governor Vetoes Vet Pension, Social Security Bill Liberalizing T j e u P / Benefit Limit Urged Drink Serving
ALBAIfV i«P>—Cow Harriman has vetoed a b'll which, in ef-fect. would iia\e ptohibited bartenders l o r n refusing to serve
Old French Fort Searched for Missing Soldier
VERDUN, France Wt-The U.S. Army searched todpy through the catacombs of an French fort near missing since Satui
The soldier, whose hot disclosed, vanis ing the caverns to
Crumbling walls
18th Century \ for a GI
day. name was
hed after enter-look around, and lack of
alcoholi they co: toxicate
The la bartend not—ser tuallv of ed. The would "or" to
An A Saturda Harrim
The rr semblyr hattan Saturda
[beverages to persons Idered "apparently" in-
maps hampered the search. The fallen into an
searchers said.
saved the boys' by leaning over the water. and pulling
grasping their them to him.
arms.
For one wants British li development pri wan high dam
The likeliest
thing. Nasser still» elp in such vast jjects as the As*j on the Nile. Arab weapon at
present is to supply weapons furtively to the often troublesome desert tribes to use in rebellion against their British-protected niK crs. The Arabs, probably also will press a diplomatic and propaganda campaign. I "Stiraatelv
See MIDDLE E
In foreign affairs, he said, the j Buiganin-Khrushchev regime a p - | p Q r m o s a u n d e r T h r e a t parently has cut back on "violence | r o m , U M J u , , u c -and hostility" and relies more on Q f T y n h o O n S i d e s w i p e political a"nd economic weapons. i r r
•."More basic changes in Soviet! TAIPEI, Formosa (<P—Southeast policy will have to take place be-j Formosa was under threat today fore the free nations can afford to I of a sideswipe by typhoon Thelma relax their vigilance,", he said. jTlte storm.
now in effect says that must not—and need
drinks to persons "ac-apparently" intoxicat-
|11 the Governor vetoed me changed the word *and."
dated Press dispatch erroneously stated that had signed the bill,
jasure, sponsored by As-n Louis Desalvio. Man-emocrat, was vetoed
Desalvio said that some fBrsons had complained they h,i<$ been domed service because of physical characteristics such as a florid complexion.
'#»
Subnormal Cold Spreids across Northern States
By T m ASSOCIATED PRESS Unseasonably cold temperatures
dominate the nation's weather today as Ap mercury skidded more than I'D degrees over wide areas of the iBpwest.
Frost and freezing temperatuie warnings! were issued for portioas of Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouril
The c A e r air swept down from Canada and brought L'4 hour drops
. of from 20 to 30 degrees in the r [ norfhernjBand central plains area
and in the middle Mississippi and
WASHINGTON i/P> — Veterans [nation's programs of veterans" 'pensions would be tied in with so-j benefits and pensions." jcial security payments and grad- in its report, the commission :ually eliminated under a proposal jsaid today's veterans' programs I offered yesterday by President Ei- should place emphasis "on those senhower's Commission on Voter-: programs which take care of the airs' Benefils. j needs arising directly out of mili-
The proposal was one of 70 made itary service . . . Veterans with ;to the President in a lengthy re-jno service - connected disability | port which, if adopted, would j after readjustment should be con-j greatly change the benefit pro-jsidered in the same category as gram now covering the nation's 22 million veterans.
soldier may have 180-foot dep shaft,
The rescue operations began after the soldier's distraught wife reported him missing, "
Col. Hampton LJ Green of Sel-ma, Ala., said there was a possibility the soldier stepped on a rotten plank, plunging him 80 feet down a shaft.
Pvt. Gordon M. 'Murray of Detroit; Mich.,-was lowered into the shaft. He reported! that the missing soldier may have tumbled into deep crevices at the foot of the shaft.
Further descents; were held up because the walls of the shaft seemed unsafe, searchers said.
The fort was one of three strongholds from which the French successfully defended the area during
The recommended changes in-j volve GI insurance, disability | compensation, survivor benefits, j widows' pensions, readjustment! benefits. Veterans Administration: structure, discharge benefits, GI loan privileges and servicemen's: benefits.
The commission was headed by: retired Gen. Omar N. Bradley and spent more than a year siuclying, the veterans' program. Bradley! formerly headed the VA.
The report did little to chart
citizens who are not veterans." The major recommendations,' if
approved by Eisenhower and passed by Congress, would:
Revise the system of rating and paying compensation to veterans with service-connected disabilities so that statutory awards for loss of parts of the body would be eliminated. Veterans with minor disabilities would get less and those with total disability would get more.
Put the World War II and Korean GI loan programs under the
the actual impact of the recom- Federal Housing Administration mendations it contained, but the j and exlcnd the World War II loan proposals apparently would lower!Program for a maximum of two
i
1916. The fort resisted some of the heaviest German bombardments of the war.
,e must seek, by means, to induce to correct existing
they orob-t injustices and genuinely pursue \ S T P a S e 2 See EISENHOWER Page 2
He said, **Wi every peaceful the Soviet bloc
Big Search Ends; All Motorboat Racers Safe
LONG REACH. Calif. » - T h e Coast Guard relaxed today after one' of the biggest air-sea .search operations in years located 36 out-'board motorboats r e p o r t e d
rig in a race from the mainland to Santa Catalina Island. Cowboy star Roy Rogers and, a c t o r John Derek were among some 80 persons lost.
There were 209 boats entered in the race which began Saturday m o r n i n g , sponsored by U. S. Sportsmen, Inc.
The winner. Bud 'Doyle, 26. Win-terhaven. Fla., made the 21-mile run in 31
Foggy and perhaps la vy on the part
minutes. ground swells
rk of seagoing sav-of the weekend pi
lots played, havoc with, the race Many retarned to mainland ports others got lost or ran out of fuel or both.
The search s t a r 11 d with air-'of gas.
planes before dark Saturday. It continued through the night and most of yesterday. It lasted for 27 hours 'before Cmdr. Arthur' M. Davison said all were safe.
The Coast Guard employed 17 ships, two airplanes and two naval reserve blimps. An undetermined number of private vessels and private planes assisted..
When it was* over, 145 of the little boats were corralled in Av-alon harbor under stem warning to stay there until today because of continuing fog.
There were no reports of injuries, but plenty of reports of the outboard m. a r i n e r s being cold, 'hungry, bedraggled and a worry, no end, to their families. .•A seaplane rescued! R. A. Mc-
Dearby. Denison, Tex., and John Miller. Venice, Calif... after they drifted all night. They had run out
moving north at 15 miles an hour and with winds up to 90 miles per hour, would bypass Formosa on the east if if continues its present course, but it would come close enough to cause possible damage.
Fire Razes 600 Houses At Jap Hot Springs
FUKUI, Japan «rft-Four thousand persons lost their homes today in a fire which destroyed 600 of 2.700 houses in the hot spring resort town of Awaramachi, 11 ; miles north of here. One person ;was killed, one was missing and about 20 injured.
TODAY'S INDEX Amusements. Area Births Classified Ads Comics County, Vicinity Crossword Puzzle Editorial Events Calendar Markets Obituaries Round • About, Town Society
22-23
' I Women's Page
10 11-26
16 -24-25
12
10 6
18 J
16 18
&-9 19-20
ID
Car's Bridge Plunge Kills Parents of 5
PUTNAM LAKE. N.Y. iB-The parents of five small children perished today when their car crashed through a railing of the Daniel Bloomer Bridge and dropped 40 feet into a creek. \
The victims were James Warren Ellis. 31, a Danbury, Conn., truck driver, and his wiije, Bernice. 28.
The accident occurred only a few miles from the Connecticut boundary, near Danbury.
A passenger with Mr. and Mrs. Ellis. John Stano of Danbury, survived the crash. Attendants at Danbury Hospital said he was not hurt seriously.
Flood Threats Rout Winnipeg Low Areas
WINNIPEG t*—Piling ice on the Assiniboine River threatened further flooding today as dikes weakened and crumbled under the pressure of a floodtide of muddy water sweeping over Southern Manitoba farmlands.
The situation irj.the Portage La Prairie area, 55 njiiles west of Winnipeg, grew worse. Work crews began building up the dikes protecting this city of 400,000. The Red River continued its slow rise in the city and residents of low-lying areas began moving out of their homes,
t
Ohio Ri|er valleys Tempalatures in those areas
were rrmtly in the 30s. It alsBwas a little cooler over
theNevsfcngland states, the Great Lakes region and the Pacific Northweft. Houghton, Mich,, had one of Me coldest readings early today \ « h 23.
Blustepr winds continued to stir dust elqjjds in the Texas Panhandle andMdjacent portions of Colorado, Alw Mexico and Oklahoma.
Meamftile, volunteers worked to bolst» dikes in Idaho and eastern OrA>n as snow in the mountains ofMhe Pacific Northwest began t o ^ a w , filling rivers to near flood s(Bge levels.
Showers pelted most of the area coveredfev the colder air. Snow or snoBflurries mixed with rain were A o r t e d in Pennsylvania. New YflRt and in an area extending frorMMichicnn to Missouri and northwA to Montana.
or cut out. many of the payments now being made to veterans, servicemen and survivors.
The recommendation to tie veterans' pensions with social
jcurity, for example, would reduce I some pensions since more than 'half of the 700,000 pensioned veterans are drawing social security payments. These, under the commission's recommendation, would
|be deducted from pension payments. Maximum combined payments would be $70 a month for
| a single veteran or $105 a month jfor one with a dependent wife.
Timothy J. Murphy, commander of the Veterans of Foreign
i Wars, said the VFW supports [many of the recommendations. ;but added:
"A number of them, partiuclarly those that would throw the veterans' pension program into the
'social security pro0 .am, are highl y objectionable and" should be denounced by all veterans."
On the other hand, Kenneth M. Birkhead, execueive director of the
| American Veterans Committee, s a i d the recommendations are a "magnificent contribution in
years, or until mid-1959. > . Prohibit the sale of government
life insurance after discharge,'except to men with disabilities which would keep them from buying commercial insurance at regular rates.
Tie social security payments up with veterans pensions, and consider other types of income as a complete or partial offset against such payments.
Put servicemen under the social security program.
Give peacetime veterans more liberal benefits, including the same amounts of compensation for service disabilities now paid to wartime veterans.
Put a deadline on conversion by a veteran of his government term life insurance to permanent insur- tdicated ance.
Develop a more compact and simple system of benefits for survivors of servicemen and veterans by using the social security system as a foundation.
Revise the eligibility requirements for pensions to widows" and children of veterans; payments would be based largely on need
he launched into a vivid account of Soviet strength.
In claiming Russia.was the first nation to explode an H-bonib from a plane, he said:
"The United States only now is intending to do this. The United States' first H-omb explosion was from a ground installation."
The derisive greeting came as Prime Minister Eden's top lieutenant indicated cautious optimism that their talks in London would prove valuable.
"If we can judge from the talks up to date.and if deeds follow words, then we can say already that the visit has been well worth while." R. A. Butler, leader of the House of Commons, said in opening the British Industries Fair.
A crowd of about 300 gave the Russian leaders a hostile reception outside Birmingham's City Hall where they were received after a flight from London.
In an address at the civic reception, Bulganin showed he had noticed the hostile reception here —and the generally cool reception he and Khrushchev have received elsewhere during their tour.
"Of course," ho said, "not all people think alike and you know, as we know that, there are people who are not happy at us coming here and trying to bring about a revival of the good relations we had in the past. But I have no doubt that the overwhelming majority of the British people, and we political leader's, want to cement and strengthen friendly relations between us."
Jeered for Nine Miles There were jeers and catcalls
for the Russian leaders all along the nine-mile drive to the city center.
One tightly packed group brandished buckets and brooms as th* sleek motorcade swished by. Others unfurled banners reading "V,-va Stalin."
It was the most hostile reception the Kremlin chieftains have received since they arrived in Britain six days ago for a 10-day visit. Thousands of exiled E a s t Europeans live in the big industrial city.
Before their takeoff from London, Bulganin and Khrushchev paused briefly to look over Britain's new Bristol Britannia, a four engine jet and piston-prop plane designed to carry 122 passengers. Britain is banking high hopes of commercial air supremacy on the plane, which is not yet in service.
A. N. Tupolev, designer of me sleek Soviet jet airliner TU104 in-
he was impressed. But he
bringing sanity and realism to the or disability.
Hammarskjold in Damascus For New Phase of Mission
i
DAMASCUS, S y r i a <f» —Dag I An Israeli army spokesman an-Hammarskjold arrived today fornounced in Jerusalem that shots talks with Syrian leaders in the were fired from Syrian territory next st&ge of his mission to bring last night at Israeli peace to the Middle East. the sea of Galilee.
The U.N. official was greeted at; Israeli Premier
commented: j "They are building something j bigger in the Soviet Union which I should-be flying in the spring of [next year. It is a four-engine tur-| bo-prop machine which will carry |150 persons."
The Kremlin chiefs. wtio have complained of being worn out by their heavy s c h e d u l e , looked cheerful as they b e g a n today's tour.
About 200 Londoners were on hand at the airport when the Russians took off. There were a few
Sep PARLEY Page I
DAILY ALMANAC
14 Cars Derailed In Syiacuse Yards
SYRACUSE I-PI — Fourteen New York ( intra] Railroad cars were derailed today in the switching yards at suburban Dewitt.No one was injured.
A raMoad spokesman said a defective fcoupling device fell on the tracks tod caused the derailment. He said there was no delay in the yard's Ipperation because it was possible to carry on switching aroundlhe derailed cars.
the airport by Syrian and U.»N. officials and a Syrian army guard of honor. Shortly after his arrival, he went into conference with Premier Said Ghazzi.
The opening conference was attended also by Maj. Gen. E.L.M. Burns, the chief U.N. truce observer: Syrian Defense Minister Rashad Barmada; and the. Syrian army chief of staff. Gen. Shaway Shukairj
Hammarskjold goes next to Jordan in his effort to restore peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors of Egypt, Jordan. Syria and Lebanon.
Egypt and Israel agreed last week to a cease-fire.
David Ben-Gu-rion of Israel told his Parliament! that Israel is ready to "examine all avenues leading toward per-
. manent peace" if Hammarskjold j "finds in any of the neighboring \ countries a sincere inclination to-!ward peace."
He credited the U.N. official with . reducing tension along the Arab-, Israeli borders but warned that "the danger of an Arab war of
| aggression against Israel is by no means over."
The Israeli Premier called upon j the United States and other na-I tioas to sell Israel* defensive arms j to achieve "a balance of arms between Israel and the Arab coun-
1 tries."
Western New York: Mostly fishermen on; cloudy and continued quite cool
[today through Tuesday with occasional showers mixed at times with wet snow. High Temperature in the 40s. Some intervals of par
t ial clearing tonight. Low tempcr-iature around 30. West to north-;west winds 10-25 miles per hour throughout.
Lake level today, 1,308.46 feet; year ago. 1.308.53.
Weather conditions for the past 124 hours ending at 9 A.M. as re-{ported at the government weatfiei ;station: Trace of snow: .37 incl I of rain over the weekend.
15-20 mph minimum 32,
Humidity today .75. Wind, northwesterly. Maximum 47; Year ago: Max. 63: min. 36 Sun sets today at 7:07 P.M. Sun rises tomorrow at 5:21.
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