TEW MKDFOHO (ORZOOIT) MAIL TMBUHE
Thursday, July 14. 19SS
US Uirgedl To
of
Question
Soviet
Dulles To Discuss
View in Strategy
Meetings in Paris
... - Paris U.PJ Britain and
France have urged the United
States not to press too hard on
the question of Russian satellite
states at next week's conference
of the - Big Four, informed
sources said today.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles probably will dis
cuss this view further when he
arrives here from Washington
for last-minute strategy meet
ings with British Foreign Sec
retary Harold MacMillan and
French Foreign Minister An-
toine Finay.
Dulles will confer first with
Finay at the Qua! D'Orsay this
afternoon, and then with Mac
Millan over dinner at the Ameri
can embassy tonight.
The trio will meet jointly Fri
day and report to the NATO For
eign Ministers Council Saturday
morning before they and French
Premier Edgar Faure fly on to
Geneva. "
Informed sources said the
United States will raise the ques
tion of freedom in the satellite
states at the conference- among
Faure, President Eisenhower,
Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin
and British Prime Minister Sir
Anthony Eden.
But the sources said British
and French diplomats did not
expect President Eisenhower to
push the issue so hard as to en
danger the succes of the confer
ence in the face of angry Soviet
reaction.
However, lending emphasis to
the American position was the
action taken Wednesday by the
Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee which approved two reso
lutions opposing colonialism and
imperialism and expressing U.S.
hope that the satellite countries
soon may be freed from Soviet
domination.
, Pinay said Wednesday that
''the Eastern European countries
could take their place in regional
security accords in Europe.
In coming here, Dulles will
take a first-hand look at Faure's
new proposal to cut the arms
budgets of the Big Four and use
the savings thus made to set up
a fund to aid underdeveloped
countries. - t. ' '
He also will study with Pinay
and MacMillan a report on joint
Allied strategy for Geneva
which has been hammered out
during the past week by a com
mittee of Western experts.
Missing Youngster
Believed With Father
New York U.R Police said
today they believed a six-year-old
girl, missing since she was
seen walking with a "man in a
white suit" last Tuesday, may
be with her father.
The girl is Yvonne Soto. Her
father, Thomas Soto, is sepa
rated from Yvonne's mother and
has been working in California
but recently came to New York
in an attempt to effect a recon
ciliation, police said. -
Mrs. Soto said she received a
telegram from Soto saying he
and the girl were flying to Cal
ifornia. Police said, however, he
may have been trying to mislead
. her because a check of airlines
showed no such passengers.
News Fflow Expected To ie Stepped (Up by Successor to Mirs. CkSBfoy
Washington" U.E Marion
B. Folsom, newly-named secre
tary of health, education and
welfare, may step up the flow of
news from his widespread de
partment.
easy to reach during his govern- J ceed Mrs. Hobby, the only worn-1 Secretary George M. Humphrey's
ment service. The department's
retiring secretary, Mrs. Oveta
Culp Hobby, often has been inac
cessible to newsmen.
President Eisenhower Wednes
day nominated Folsom, now
Reporters have found. Folsom t treasury undersecretary, to sue-
JacCisoBuviODe (DouebcdD
Sadies IParCi Mer
From Britt Estiafte
Jacksonville The city coun
cil has taken under consideration
an offer from the executors of
the Miss Amalia (Mollie) Britt es
tate to have the property in the
Iowa Policemen
Called To Unravel
Story of Murder
Joplin, Mo. (U.R) FBI
agents called in Iowa officers
today to help them unravel a
farm hand's rambling, confused
story that he raped and killed
21-month , old Donna Sue Davis
of Sioux City.
Audrey Brandt, known by the
nickname "Mugeye" in LaPorte
City, la., signed a written state
ment Wednesday which said he
killed the blonde, curly haired
child, who was described as a
living doll."
But acting Detective Captain
Johnny Showers said Brandt, 42,
admitted any crime we asked
him about, so we couldn't be
sure of anything." .
There were discrepancies In
Brandt's story and federal
agents summoned Sioux City of
ficers familiar with details of
the brutal murder.
Iowa police said Brandt has
a record of one conviction for
sex molestation in 1947 at Ced
ar Rapids and was fined $100.
He was arrested last. April 24
at Waterloo, la., for investiga
tion of annoying two small girls
in a movie theater, but was re
leased when the investigation
showed no molesting.
At LaPorte City, Town Mar
shal Henry Kruse, who said he
has known Brandt since he was
a small child, said Brandt didn't
get much schooling, and "can
barely write his name.' He
said Brandt had been involved
in petty thievery a long time
in the LaPorte City area but
was never prosecuted because
the people, in town knew they
could go to him and get their
property back.
A truck driver's suspicion led
to Brandt's arrest on a Joplin
street about midnight Tuesday.
The driver, who gave Brandt
a ride to Joplin from Springfield,
Mo., said the man acted strange
ly and would not talk except
to say he was "headed south.'
Police and FBI agents report
ed several "good" fingerprints
were found in the bedroom from
which Donna was abducted' last
Sunday night while her parents
watched television in ' another
room.. ;
southwest section of Jacksonville
made into a municipal park.
The council received the offer
in a letter from Attorney Frank
VanDyke, who represents the
Britt estate. ,
To View Property
Mayor John Keaveny- has
called a meeting of the council
to tour the property, and discuss
problems in maintaining it as a
park. Among problems to be dis
cussed are financing and whether
or not the offers should be de
cided by a vote of Jacksonville
residents at an election.
The building may or may not
be included in the offer, Van
Dyke said, depending on dispo
sition should the city accept the
offer.
The estate originally was
willed to the Southern Oregon
Historical society along with
$25,000 providing the society
fiananced maintenance. Society
officials believed, however, they
would be unable to maintain the
estate as a museum because of
certain restrictions on disposi
tion of $25,000 and lack of avail
able funds to contribute to that
sum. .
To Education System
Under the terms of the win, if
the society did not maintain the
estate as a museum, the estate
would go to the state department
of higher education.
The offer from executors of
the estate provides that if the
property is not maintained by
the city of Jacksonville as a pub
lic park, then it would revert
back to the state department of
higher education. .
an cabinet member in his ad
ministration.
Mrs. Hobby is leaving Aug. 1
because of the serious illness of
her husband, former Texas Gov.
William P. Hobby. She will take
his - place- as president of the
Houston Post Publishing Co.
Answers Questions Freely
.Reporters could recall no news
conference .Folsom held on his
own at the Treasury Department.
But he usually sat in on Treasury
Group Pressured
To Cut Tax Plan
Washington U.R) The House
Public Works Committee was
under heavy pressure today to
whittle down an - $800,000,000
a year tax hike the Democrats
proposed to help pay for a big
highway program.
". Most of the heat apparently
came from truckers who have
loudly protested proposed tax
increases on new trucks and
trailers, diesel fuel and heavy
duty tires and tubes.
The 34 - member committee
turned to .the financing provi
sions at a closed meeting after
working out the 'construction
details of the 12-year $47,400,
000,000 program.
Rep. Frank E. Smith (D-Miss.)
who favors highways but. op
poses the tax plan, said he ex
pected Republican members
"with some support from our
side,", to scale down some of the
proposed taxes.
He said they then probably
would move to include part of
President Eisenhower's bond
financing proposal to make up
the loss in revenue.
The committee rejected the
President's plan yesterday, but
the 19-16 decision was. largely
procedural and did not rule out
the possibility it could be offer
ed in whole or in part again.
PHONE SERVICE STARTS
Frankfurt, Germany (U.R)
The first telephone service be
tween. Frankfurt and Moscow
since World War n was estab
lished Wednesday.
What
good cook knows
Just a little difference in ingredients
makes a big difference in cooking results.
Snowdrift k just a IMt Ugfcr than any other ahortaB- ..
ing and that can make-, the big difference in giving
your family lighter, wwn digestible fried foods. .
, p "!?'- n
SoowdnApyrtajtutalitdemort
safety ihsn ordinary shorten'
Jags, beeauseit fries perfectly at
. correct high temperaturea.'niat
can make the big difference in
digettMUyottnB&foodM.
Snowdrift'a ingredients are .we
a IMs costlier than any other
olid shortening (yet you pay
no' mora). That can make the
big difference in better tasting
foods, whether fried or baked.
No other shortening at any price is
so creamy, so digestible - and so light!
news conferences and answered
questions freely. Newsmen also!
could reach him by telephone.
Mrs. Hobby has held six news
conferences during her 30
months in office; Only her first,
in April, 1953, and her last,' in
February of this yearwere open
to questions on all subjects. The
others were limited to discussions
of specific legislation. :
Limitad -Interviews
Mrs. Hobby granted only a
few limited interviews usually
in connection with a magazine
article concerning' work of, her
department. Newsmen. ; found it
almost impossible to speak to her
by telephone, although queries
frequently were relayed through
the department's press officer.
She. has been one of the most
sought-after "speakers in the Ei
senhower administration. She
made hundreds of speeches be
fore many groups, but had to
turn down thousands of other re
quests. ' .
Social Security Expert
Folsom told newsmen he ex
pects education and health mat
ters to be the biggest problems at
HEW. The 61-year-old business
executive is an expert on Social
Security and health insurance.
He conceded that his exper
ience in the educatioan field is
limited, although he has served
as trustee of the University of
Rochester and as an overseer of
Harvard college. ?.
Folsom was treasurer of the
Eastman Kodak Co. before tak
ing the Treasury Department
post. He helped initiate a broad
health insurance -plan covering
all illness which is now used ers in 1928 and in 1934 served on,,
by j 17 Rochester, VN. Y., -1 com- a government advisory council?
panics. He also helped start a on formation of the Social Secur
pension plan for Eastman work-1 ity system.
,
ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 16
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