WEATHER Fair through Wednesday;" high Wednesday 80-86; low tonight 36-42. LA GRANDE OBSERVER 309th Issue 63rd Year LA GRANDE, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1959 Price 5 Cent ike Hopes Allies Will Agree To Neootiate With Russians ANOTHER NAIL Bernal Hug, Sr. of Elgin, left, and Noel Scott of Elgin, are in the process of constructing the Cricket Flat Grange hooth at the Union County Fair. A few of the booths will have new concrete floors when the Fair opens Thursday. ( Observer Photo) :ri jwj V Cvn.'' A STILL AT WORK Workmen are still putting the fin-, ishing touches on the new eating booths at the Fair grounds. The new booths will replace the tents that have been used in past years. Roy Todd of Union, above, is one of several workers on the project. The work is expected to be completed by Fair time. (Observer Photo) , y5',?. club :mnm&M$t&& ii? T-tZ-J?.' :;i'""'t'..;'''if::j READY FOR FAIR OPENING Ted Sidor Union County Extension agent and Larkin Mazer, FFA advisor and Vo cational Agriculture teacher at Elgin, show the scaled miniatures that will be on disnlav at thP txtension in Thursday. This booth was the first to he completed for the Fair. (Observer PhOjo)' La Grande Stores Open win ai uie umuu vuuiiiy ANSWERS TRUMAN'S DIG ABOUT RUSSIAN JUNKET WASHINGTON (UP1) President Eisenhower, on the eve of his departure for Western Europe, said today he hoped that he and allied leaders would join in a mutual statement of readiness to negotiate with Russia, but in firm determination never to retreat from their basic prin ciples. Eisenhower told a news conference he also would suggest Climbers Try Again For Bodies FRANCON1A, N. H. (UPI I Daring mountain climbers planned to try today to retrieve from a i wind-lashed mountainside the I bodies of two Connecticut youths , who died late Monday just as res cuers reached them. "Don't let us die; for God's sake help us," one cried as the team of crack rock climbers inched to within a few feet of the narrow ledge where the pair had been trapped for over 24 hours. They died apparently of exposure. , In a final effort, three res cuers, hanging from steel pins hammered into the rain-slicked granite face of Profile Mountian, formed a human ladder so that two lower men could clamber up the ropes and over their shoulders to reach the ledge. Though the risky attenmpt suc ceeded, tt was too late. One boy writhed in delirium on the ledge, ni . u: ' ..j.. i , iiufcu w ma aurauy uedu com- panion. tie aiea minutes later after rescuers had dressed him in warm clothes and begun the task of lowering him down the mountain. The victims, both college stu dents, were Alfred Whipple Jr. 20. of Gates Ferrv. Conn..-" sophomore ' at Brown University, and bidney Crouch, 21. of Led yard. Conn., a student at the ex port (Pa. I Bible Institute. The eight-mart rescue team, ex pe-t climbers who were members of the Appalachian Mountain Club. scaled the slippery face of the rocky mountain in 50-mile-an-hour winds, drifting fog and rain. New Class. Added In I Open Saddle At Fair A new class has been added to the open saddle horse section at the Union County fair this year. There will be a performance class for western reining horses and pleasure horses. The pleasure horjes will be three-gaited. First prize in both classes will be $10, second, $7.50 and third $5. , . The halter class has been part of the Fair for several years, but then; has never been a per formance class. riv m vcn iicic 1 . . , to the heads of West Germany. Great Britain, France and Italy that they cooperate in helping advance the health and living standards of the two billion people of the new or underdeveloped na tions. The chief executive, meeting with reporters before taking off by jet plane early Wednesday for Bonn, Germany, also made these other outstanding points:. He said this government has under immediate, urgent study a request for the government of Laos for new funds with which to' fight inroads of Communist forces. Will Mm! Khrushchev He said the Russian govern ment notified him Monday night that Soviet Premier N i k i t a Khrushchev will be coming to the United States next month as chief of the Russian state. Therefore, the President said he planned to welcome Khrushchev personally at the airport on his arrival and en tertain him at dinner at the White House. Without calling him by name, Eisenhower struck back forceful ly at former President Harry S. Truman who criticized the chief executive's planned trip to Russia this fall. Eisenhower said he was getting weary of people speaking about blows to presidential pres tige at a time when he was giving his last atom of energy for the whole human race. He announced he was sending letters to House Speaker Sam Rayburn and Vice President Rich- ard M. .Nixon, .presjdhq (Uicer of the Senate, warninp of serious .repercussions K Congress fails to act adequately before adjournment on legislation to permit raising the interest rate on long-term fed eral securities, on the requested gasoline tax increase to finance the interstate highway building program, and on the authoriza tion for the Federal Housing Ad ministration. Calls for Labor Bill He also in his news confer ence called again for congression al approval of a labor bill close to the version adopted by the House and now in a House-Senate con ference. . Eisenhower read a statement giving five major purposes of his trip to Germany, England and France: 1. To pledge the country's "de votion to peace with honor and jus See IKE HOPES On Pag t Morse Backs Measure On Explosives WASHINGTON (UPI - Sen Wayne L. Morse (D-Orei Monday urged congressional approval of a bill which he said would have averted the Roscburg disaster. The bill, which would make all federal rcgulaUons covering ship ment of explosives apply to both private carriers and common car riers. Is sponsored by Sen. War ren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.) Morse said if the bill would have been law, the Roscburg dis aster would not have happened A portion of the city was de vastated by the explosion of a truck laden with 6 Ions of ex plosives Aug. 7. A fire touched off the blast. Previdas Ptnaltits "The truck would not have beet near the burning building, for the simple reason that it would nol have been legal for the driver ol the truck even to have driven the truck into that area of Roseburg. let alone park it and leave it," the senator explained. 4 Morse said some firms find It cheaper and easier to transport explosives with a privately owned truck. But the private carriers are not under the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commis sion's regulations governing the hauling of explosives and com bustible. No bearings have yet been held on the bill by the Senate Com I" Committee. Until 9 LEARNS PLANTS AREN'T BAMBOO LOS ANGELES (UPI) A 29-year-old nun was booked early todey on tuspician of violating narcotics laws when polica uprooted 586 marijuana plants In the yard of his home. "Wall, I'll be darned," said the suspect, Mike Micastio Jr., a singer. "I didn't know what they v. art. thought they were bim!o plants." 41 Persons Missing At Quake Site BOZEMAN, Mont. iUPl Au thorities today sought word on number of persons missing since earthquakes triggered murderous rock slides in the Yellowstone Park a ea. The list issued Monday in cluded 95 names. but quickly was pared to 41. It was believed the list would be further shortened by reports from across the country, but it was feared there may be more bodies in the shambles cre ated by landslides a week aso. Ten persons were known dead as the result of a huge landslide that covered camp grounds in Madi son Kiver Canyon. The side of a mountain collapsed in the area early last Tuesday, just hours after a powerful quake rocked the Pacific Northwest. Campers in the area were un registered, so there was no sure way of knowing just who was in the valley at the time of the slide. A search for bodies was called off during the weekend when the estimated 50 million tons of rock and earth proved too formidable an obstacle. The list of persons still report ed missing in last week's earth quakes included: Mr. and Mrs. William Razdoruff and their three children, I'ocatel lo, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Wil liams and their three children, Idaho Falls. Idaho. Pickets Idle laOOO Workers At Shipyards PORTLAND I I'll A coast wide tieup of the shipyard indus try moved into its second day to day with some 1.000 men idled here by pickets f the Interna tional Assn. of Machinists. Three major shipbuilding and repair yards and several smaller plants here reported pickets Mon day as the machinists began a strike against shipyards in Ore gon, Washington, and California An estimated 150 machinists were on strike in Portland. Union sources said another 800-900 work ers honored the picket lines Mon day and did not report for work All told, only about 1,200 ma chinists went on strike on the West Coast, but an estimated 10,000 workers have been idled by the strike. Shipyard workers at Bremer ton, Wash., Monday continued to work. In San Francisco, represcnta tives from the union and from the shipyard owners were expect ed to continue negotiation ses sions with Federal Mediator Ralph Patterson today. . Patterson reported the two sides were deadlocked on wage dc mands. The union said it would not settle for less than a 32-cent wage package, while the employ ers refused to go above their 24 cent package of.'er. West German Tumultous BONN! Germany (UPI) West German leaders today were pre laring a tumultuous welcome for ''resident Elsenhower when he ar ives here Wednesday on a visit they hailed as a demonstration of U. S. determination to defend West Germany's interests in his talks . with the Soviet Union. Government officials said the President, who arrives for a 24 hour stay, would receive a wel come exceeding the pro-American demonstration that welcomed Sec retary of State Christian Herter on his visit to West Berlin five weeks ago. Eisenhower was the supreme commander of the great Allied force that gave Germany its most disastrous military defeat 14 years ago, but he returns Wednes- colony p.m. Tomorrow years ago, but he returns Wednes 4-H'ERS KING SIZED CORN Milo Hibbert, a member of the 411 Garden Club, smiles proudly as he displays the corn he grew In front of his home this summer. Milo wiill enter the corn along with several other vegetables that he grew at the Union County Fair which begins tomorrow. (Observer Photo) U.S. Is Considering New Ways; To Lend Support To Laotians WASHINGTON (UPH Top, Defense and State Department of ficials today considered new moves to strengthen the Laotian government's hand in suppressing Communist-led rebels. Htih-levol confereofes wore be ing held to find ways to lend sup port to the royal forces. Plans un der consideration would limit the additional direct aid to more sup port through supplies while ex panding diplomatic and moral en couragement wherever and when ever possible. One of the possibilities is for the Southeast Asia Treaty Organ Trusty Admits Giving Inmate Lighted Cigaret TOMS RIVER N. J. (UPI I A prison trusty confessed today that he handed a deranged in mate a lighted cigaret shortly be fore an explosion and fire gutted the county jail killing eight in mates who were trapped inside. Assistant Ocean County Prose cutor Thomas Mucciforl disclosed Monday night that the deranged inmate, General Petersen of Phila delphia, had been given a highly inflammahlc solution of parade hyde, a tranquilizer with aa ether busc, alrnut the same time. Muccifori theorized that Peter sen, 35, described as a frequent drunk with "a tendency to tear things apart." may have thrown the tramiuilizcr solution against the side of his padded cell and then lit it with the cigaret. Sheriff Harry Roe questioned trusty Buenos White, 59, of Lake wood, N. J , all night and an Greeting day as the protector of freedom from Communism in tne western half of the nation. The West German government said Eisenhower would be greeted with a 21-gun artillery salute when his Boeing 707 Jet lands at nearby Wahn Airfield Wednesday. Adenauer and most of his cabinet will be on hand to greet Eisen hower and Herter. A German military band will play the American and German national anthems end the Presi dent and chancellor will inspect an honor battalion of Army, Navy and Air Force men. After brief addresses they depart for the hour long drive to the temporary White House in Bad Godcsberg, the Bonn suburb that houses the diplomatic Leaders ization (SEATOi lo exercise its previously-announced plan to pro tect the tiny Southeast Asia na tion from outside forces. Laos is not actually a member of SK.VTO. .Troops May Ba Premature . Diplomatic officials believe the introduction, of troops now from the outside would be premature since the royal Laotian govern ment is not yet using all of its own forces of 25,000 men. Authorities recognize that the Communist government of North Vict Nam has violated the 1954 Geneva agreement ending the In-do-China War by increasing the nounced early today that White had signed a statement admitting he had given Petersen a cigaret. Prosecutor Howard Ewart said White had done nothing criminal. 'It was an act of kindness," Eward said, but he "gave it to the wrong guy." Roe criticiz-d White for hand ing Petersen the cigaret but said the use of the tranquilizer soni lion was standard practice in the case of inmates who get out of hand. Despite the hew disclosures, in vesication into the cause of Sun day's explosion and fire in the greatly overcrowed jail continued The two story jail housed 65 in mates although it was built to ac comodatc only 2K. The dead included Petersen and seven inmates who suffocated in an adjoining cell. Fifteen other prisoners were injured. Prepare For Ike PRESIDENT EISENHOWER Leaves t or f.urope For Fall Leaves For Europe IS ' i i wc:- level of military equipment In the hands of Laotian rebel forces. Vict Nam and Laos', together with Cambodia, made .up' what was Imlo-Chlna. : . ' .v-- However, ' the - administration was reported not to be ready at this time to break its part of the agreement by lending military planes or throwing -other equip ment into the fight. So far, all U. S. help has been of a non military nature except for aid in training Laotian troops. Sack U. N. Intervention A more likely possibility is to support the Laotian government's request for United Nations inter vention through the establishment of an inspection committee that would focus world attention more clearly on the nature of the Laot ian fighting. I A special envoy of Laos. Ngon Sananikone. arrived here Mondaj night from United Nations head quarters in New York City to coi fer with the State Department og the situation in his country. Senate Democratic Whip Mike Mansfield (Mont.) told the Senate Monday the United Nations should immediately send observers ;t$ Laos to get accurate reports. ' r Nixon Hopes For Friendly Visit For 'K' MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)- Vice President Richard M. Nixoo today urged the American people to give Soviet Premier NikltJ Khrushchev a "courteous recep. lion" when he visits the Uniteg Slates next month. . Nixon hit back at criticism oj the Soviet leader's visit in speech prepared for delivery at the American Legion Convention here. ' Nixon said courtesy .0 Khrush chev would not change his mlnfl alxiut the American system, bti that courtesy is "Lhe American way of doing things." '' "It would be naive and wishful thinking to assume that the visit of Mr. Khrushchev to the Unite States will result in any basic change in the Communist objec, tive of world domination, or thei adherence to policies designed tj achieve (bat goal," Nixon said, a But he said "white understand ing atone will not bring peace? misunderstanding could provoke war." ; "And It is because his visit can serve to reduce the possibilities of such misunderstanding that tt could contribute to the chance that we can settle our differences with out war an, therefore, desenrt the approval of the American peo i p.. n ..u. j Opening ple, Nixon said.