LA GRANDE OBSERVER WEATHER Fair Thursday; low to nifht 40-47; high Thursday 86-93. 286h Issue 63rd Ytar LA GRANDE, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 Pric 5 Centt w n aoon o iraDim iramioe Rolls Junto La S Ike Praises Nixon For His Conduct On Russian Visit ONLY TIME WILL TELL IF TENSIONS REDUCED WASHINGTON (UPI) President Eisenhower said today Vice President Richard M. Nixon has acquitted himself splendidly on his tour of the Soviet Union but that only time will tell whether tensions will be reduced as a result ot the visit. Eisenhower said Nixon was not authorized to invite Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev to visit this country. He ducked a ques tion as to whether a Khrushchev visit could result from Nixon's trip. Reporters accompanying Nixon on the trip have written that they considered it almost certain the vice president would suggest a Ike Okays Substitute Labor Bill WASHINGTON UPI Presi dent Elsenhower today gave his qualified blessing to a substitute labor reform bill unveiled in the House this week. He told a news conference that the measure, sponsored by Reps. Phil A. Landrum iD-Ga.i and Robert P. Griffin (R-Mich.i, came much closer to his ideas for deal ing with union corruption than the Senate bill and one approved by the House Labor Committer. The President said he thought the new legislation went far to ward correcting the evils exposed by the Senate rackets investiga tion. He said he had not studied all of the bill but had been ad vised it would come a long way closer to carrying out his recom mendations than other measures. The Landrum-Griffin bill car ries stricter curbs on secondary boycotts and organizational pick eting in line with administration recommendations No Comment On Steel On other topics which came up at his news conference, the Presi dent said: He docs not think that Rus sian missile superiority gives the Soviet Union an advantage at Geneva. He noted the U. S. fired an intercontinental missile Tues day night and this nation also has other means and methods which fully counter balance . Soviet strength during the transition from conventional weapons to long range missiles. He would not comment on whether tlc record-breaking prof it reported by the U. S. Steel Corporation Tuesday for the first half of 1959 should permit a wage increase without a price increase. He said lie repeatedly had an swered such questions by saying that he would not discuss subjects during negotiations lest he appear to be favoring one side or the Other. He is gratified that some of the winners in the Hawaiian elec tion are of Asian extraction and believes the result is a very fine example of democracy at work. T (I .?.L.. - " . I UP YA' CO, NARCISSA Play leads Leu Edwards and Roberta Miller I visit to the United States by Khrushchev when Nixon returns to Washington. There has been no official announcement of this however. On other aspects of Soviet Americai affairs, the President said he is not ready to say that the Geneva Foreign Ministers Conference should end because of a stalemate between the East and West. But he volunteered that there still has not been progress that would justify a summit con ference. Russians Like Americans Eisenhower made it clear he believes the Geneva conference should be recessed, if necessary, to permit Secretary of State Chris tian A. Herter to attend a meet ing beginning Aug. 12 in Santiago. Chile, of the foreign ministers of this hemisphere. The President said he believes all could agree that Nixon has acquitted himself splendidly on the Soviet trip. He said this is hal you would expect from a man in such a hl'gYl office of gov ernment. One thing that is clear from the reception that Nixon has had so far, Eisenhower said, is that the Russian people continue to have a warm feeling for Ameri cans. As to the reiwrts that a Khrush chev visit was being considered by the Nixon group in the Soviet Union, the President said that this was a subject that has been bandied back and forth for a long time and will be talked alwut a lot in the future. Nixon Lacks Authority Asked whether the vice presi dent had been given authority to invije Khrushchev to the United States, the President said of course not.' He said, however, that the vice president has the right to discuss the pros and cons of such a proposal. The president said he had no particular feeling about the ques tion of whether the cong-ession-ally inspired proclamation by the President naming last week as Captive Nations Week cmbar-, rassed Nixon because of its tim ing. He cited his 1952 campaign statements that the U.S. would never believe that true peace could be established in the world See NIXON On Page 8 tour wagon train. (Observer Photo) FORTUNE TELLER MIS-READ FACTS SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) Fortune teller Jack Richard Mots, SI, mil-reed his crystal ball Tuesday. "You're an easy going type," he told a cus tomer. The customer then identified himself at detective Bill Madi son and arretted Mots for vio lation of an anti-fortune tell ing law. Russians Hold Debate With Nixon SVERDLOVSK. USSR. UPI) Nixon flew into this industrial city of the Urals today after another of his rough and tumble debates with Russian hecklers His greeting here was warm and friendly, as it was on arrival and departure from the western Si berian city of Novosibirsk. But the warmth ran somewhat cold when Nixon was subjected to some tough give-and-take by three men in Novosibirsk before he left there this morning. The three men identified them selves as workers, but their tech nique and questions reflected the well-indoctrinated Communist par ty adherent. The first and most vigorous ex change came when Nixon visited the dam on the Ob River. There, he took on Grigori Fedorovitch Belausov, 30, who identified him self as an electrician at the No vosibirsk hydro-electric station Belausov challenged American foreign policy, demanded to know why the United States had mili tary bases in many countries out side its borders, at times shouted directly into Nixon's face, repeat edly interrupted the vice presi dent, aad -spoke with -cuctrWifftr that some of his colleagues had to calm him down. . Nixon Speaks Saturday Nixon gave as good as he took. He told Belausov that he had dis cussed the question of V. S. mil itary bases with Premier Nikita Khrushchev last Sunday, chal lenged the Russian about Soviet domination of the East European satellites, and invited him to lis ten to a Nixon speech from Mos cow Saturday as well as western broadcasts from abroad in order to get information from both sides on current cold war issues. The vice president ran into a second questioner, this time a milder one named Antoli A. Chart gov, a senior engineer, when he went inside' the brick hydro-clcc-tric plant. Chcrtgov followed the same technique as Belausov, only rath er sheepishly, in saying he want ed to ask several questions. Nixon invited him to do so. When Chertgov asked Nixon why the United States and Russia could not agree on ending nuclear tests, the vice president told him it took two to make a bargain and that the West wanted to be sure it was doing more than just signing another piece of paper. He said tests would cease when there was agreement on complete inspection. 1 BRINGS BACK MEMORIES a wagon at North Powder and Oregon. WAGONMASTER TAKES TIME OUT Tex Serpa, waconmaster for the Oregon Ccntcnial Wagon Train talks with Observer reporter Neil Andersen at the Train's camp site at North Powder last night. The wagons moved in to La Grande today where they were greeted by local residents. (Observer Photo) Night With The Wagon Train Fulfills Dream Of Reporter Editor's Note: Observer re porter Neil Andersen spent last night with the Wagon Train at their north Powder camp site. The story below gives his impression of the Wagoneors along with some of the tales of the Oregon Trail told by the modern day pioneers. By NEIL ANDERSEN Observer Staff Writer Every boy dreams of a night with the wagon traK Thai drota was fulfilled (or .this reporter last night. And the mem ory of exciting talcs told by Ore gon's modern day pioneers will not soon fade. The pioneers who trudged across the plains more than 100 years ago were a hardy, determined lot. Their 20th Century counterparts are just as hardy and determined ad real friendly. Thyrza Polling is a young woman making the trip with her two sons. Rodney and Trevor. With her black hair tied in a red bandanna and her blue eyes shining she'll tell you she just couldn't pass up the opportunity to ride with the wagons. Two Biggest Thrills Her two biggest thrills on the trip were the night they slept on prairie grass that had not been touched since the original Oregon pioneers came through. "The first time we ran across the ruts of the Oregon Trail was quite a thrill, too," she said. A muleskiiver from Medford tells an unusual story. George McUne drives the pair of big white mules that he drew before the train left Missouri. His mother told him that the first thing he bod ever ridden in was a wagon pulled by a team of white mules. George is pretty anxious to get the pair home. C. A. Hill of Telocaset leans on talks of memories of his trip to (Observer Photo) One of the mules is 16, the other 20 years old. Last night the pair got frisky and walked off with part of the fence that sur-rou-ds the athletic field. "Buffalo Bill" Dave Gastman, with his goatee and long white hair trailing over his shirt collar ready for scalping, always smiles and jokes with visitors. Dave tells about the time he worked for a fellow on an Indian reservation. He claims he used to walk around the reservation and the squaws used to pirch him and say "Mighty fino boy." Weaver Clark drives the Hills- boro wagon and is the oldest man (66) in the caravan. Stuck in the front of his wagon is a little cactus plant that he picked up in Wyoming. "Pop" has a shotgun in his wagoi that is just for display. His real weapon is a toy sawed-off shotgun that he used to warn Secre tary of State Howell Appling about his hostile wagon. Dick Carter, advance man for the caravan, told the crowd that gathered some of the incidents that have happened along the route. Stories of Indians who could 't ride and ball point pens that melted in the heat drew loud laughs from the crowd. Carter warned any would-be at tackers that the wagonncrs had long ago run out of blank am munition and all they had was live." Carter told the crowd that when the people of Oregon are prouder of being Oregoians they will make the state a better place to live. Wagonmaster "Tex" Serpa said that everyone always says it's so nice to have you. It's nice to be here, he continued, it's just like CHIEF VISITS WAGONS AI Kaiser, author of "Dr. In Buckskin Clad," visited train in Indian costume. (Observer Photo) an old pair of slippers to be back in Oregon. Walter Milliard, who does the shoeing for the train, started with 800 pair of horseshoes in Inde pendence. In addition to using these, it has been necessary to buy at least 200 more. "Shorty" estimated that a pair of horseshoes will last between three and four days on a. wagon horse and about a week on a saddle horse. "Some of those shoes were worn so thin you could read a news paper through them, he said. The wagonners. most of them clad in buckskins or Levi's, are a well tanned crew. 1-ong side burns, chin whiskers and full beards such as the multi-colored one sported by Rudy Roudebaugh. lend authenticity to the travelers. Ben Griffith was hitching his mules to the mail wagon this morn ing and he started to thi- k about what they have had to cope with on the trip. "We have a lot of conveniences (hat the first pioneers didn't and a lot of inconveniences. We're geared to the jet age. Traffic, barb wire and paved roads have caused a lot of headaches he con linued. We have had more prob lems with greater conveniences." R. R. Roudebaugh says their biggest problem is going back "When the first pioneers came through Oregon they were making progress. We have had to go back in history to duplicate this trip and this is our big problem. Thursday 'morning when the teams lean into their harness it will be with determination. The same determination and pride of acomplishment will show in the travel weary faces of every wagon- ner as the wagons move West ward. rn RESIDENTS LINE STREET TO WELCOME WAGONS Harness creaked and rigging jingled as La Grande residents wel comed the Oregon Centennial Wagon Train today. The wagons filed from circle this morning at North Powder and pulled out onto the highway boand for La Grande. Soon the clip clop of shod hooves rang through the chilly morn ing air and the 59'ers settled down for the 24 mile trip to Pioneer Park where they will spend the night. Residents, city officials, eager youngsters and local pioneers lined Adams Avenue to welcome the modernday version of the first wagon train to Oregon. The wagonncrs spent a cool night camped on the athletic field at Powder Valley high school. A sprinkler turning slow ly in the morning l&ht had a ring of ice under it and a faint trace of frost was visible on the ground. It was a chilly 38 degrees as the wagon train left and the pio neers dug into their gear for jackets and coats. Ki Roudebaugh and Jean Mar shall were stomping their feet while preparing breakfast for the wagon train before it left North Powder. The wagonners posed with their plates for early bird photographers and joked with cooks as they stood in line. One of the boys said: "I like everything but the shells." Some one else told them to hurry, he wanted breakfast before noon. The horses whinnied as they were harnessed and from across the camp a mule brayed. Air It Frotty The wagnnner's breath was visible in the frosty air and steam rose from their coffee cups as they talked about the day's trip before getting underway. The wagon from Independence was hit with shrinking wheels again Tuesday. The wooden wheels tend to dry out and the metal rims become loose, accord ing to Roy Brabham, wagonner from Eugene. Instead ot soaking the wheels. Brabham broke out a hydraulic tire setter and "shrank" the tire to fit the dried-out wheel. The wagon people were served lunch yesterday by the North Powder Ladies Aid. The dinner meal was a pot luck given by the Wolf Creek Grange. After the dinner the modern pioneers were introduced to the crowd of ap proximately 500 persons, includ ing several from La Grande, who greeted the train. Shortly after nine the lights went out and wagonncrs prepar ed to bed down for what proved to be a chilly night. National Guard troops from La Grande, who had picked up the train just the other side of North Powder, stood guard throughout the night. Six men swapped shifts during the night. The first group arrived at 3:30 in the afternoon and stood guard until relieved at 10. The second shift served from 10 p.m. until 2 a.m. The final shift served un til the wagons departed. The National Guard is provid ing an escort for the wagon train through Oregon. La Grande will provide the escort until the train reaches Pendleton. The train will be guarded to The Dalles where the wagons will be floated down the Columbia to the mouth of the Willamette. Many Events Tonight Thirty-three members of the Independence, Ore., Chamber of Commerce flew into La Grande today to greet the wagon train as it arrived. A full schedule of events is planned to entertain and feed the wagonncrs tonight. The Li ons and the Chamber of Com merce are sponsoring a public dinner at the armory. Admission is $1.25 for adults and 50 cents for children. A square dance exhibition, wa ter ballet and swimming races plus a western dance with music by Cliff Woodcll will be featured in the night's program. A special performance of the play "Doctor In Buckskin Clad" will be given at the college coli seum at 8. Breakfast will he served by the Soroplomista at Riverside Park Thursday morning. Centennial commissions from Union and Umatilla counties and the La Grande Chamber of Com merce arc planning a ceremony for the opening of the new high way between Glover and Meach am to coincide with the passage of the Wagon Train. Chief speakers will be W. C. Williams, State Highway Engin eer and Charles Reynolds, for mer member of the State High way Commission. The ceremony is scheduled to take place near the Katncla inter change at 10 Thursday morning. The wagon train will make camp that night on Strickland flat near the interchange. The public is Invited to attend the ceremony. Pioneer Tells Of Driving Own Wagon 'I drove one of. those wagons out to Oregon when I was only 11 years old." said C. A. Hill as he eyed the Oregon wagon train' encampment at North Powder. Hill is a slight man with grey ing hair who has lived on his 995 acre farm near Telocaset for U year. My parents and I left Carson City. Nev., 78 years ago to come to Oregon, Hill said. We had two four horse wagons and one two horse hitch that I drove," he con tinued. Hill told of the first time he came to North Powder. 'We parked our wagons just south of the flour mill and my brother and I went fishing. We got all the fish we could handle and fried them for breakfast, ' he said. Hill recalled that the trip from Carson City took seven weeks to complete. The family moved into the Grande Ronde valley and after he got married he moved to his present farm in Telocaset. Despite his 89 years Hill still moves around quite a bit. He still likes to hunt and fish although he claims he doesn't do as good as he would like. "It isn't like it used to be." Hill said. "They have roads and all we had were trails." - . Reds, U. S. Agree To End Talks GENEVA (UPI) The United States and Russia agreed today to wrd up the deadlocked Big Four Foreign Ministers Confer ence within a week. The decision came after the Soviets brought the talks to a near-breakdown by increasing their price for a Ber lin truce. American diplomats warned that they had little hope ot any Berlin agreement before the scheduled wind-up. The other western allies agreed to the Herter- Gromyko arrange ment. The end of the talks need not necessarily be a rupture or a break-up in anger, a U.S. spokes man indicated. He said the United States hopes to resume the discussions on Ber lin and Germany at a later date. Assistant Secretary of State An drew Berding. in making the an nouncement, added this caution: "Do not interpret this to mean that the conference will end with an agreement." Herter Returning Homo ,'. "The idea." ho added, "is to have as many discussions as pos sible during the next week to see whether we can reach an agree ment by next Wednesday.'' But, in reply to questions, Ber ding admitted the U.S. delegation has little hone of any agreement here on Berlin. Herter conferred with Russia's Andrei A. Gromyko at lunch to day and it was during a post lunch conversation in Herter's liv ing room that the two agreed .to end the conference next Wednes day. After detailed discussion of the western and Soviet papers on Berlin exchanged Tuesday. Her ter told Gromyko he intended to leave for Washington a week from Thursday and that the conference would have to come to an end by that time. Earlier, both East and West had rejected rival plans for a Berlin truce. The double rejection ' ap peared to doom the Geneva talks to failure. . TOOK BULL BY HORNS ATLANTA (UPI) U. Col. Maynard P. Booth, stationed at Ft. McPherson. out-manned gun-carrying squad of motorcycle police with only a rope and a jeep Monday. The Army officer, attracted by the curious activity of the policemen, learned a wfM bull was loose. He had It roped and tied in five minutes. Just the way be learned it, he said, to his South Dakota youth. 1