^'sn te withdrawal of troops 4 known dead from egypt ... › newspaper4 › amsterdam ny... ·...

1
! • Net Paid Circulation •Over 13.7QO , i '• .Vol. LXXVIIL, No. 165 Weather* Cloudy, Cold 1 a - 3 Recorder Established 183S—Democrat Established Consolidated 1693 1870 Amsterdam, N.Y., Monday,'March 4, 1957 Full Associated Press Report by Leased Wirt Official City and County Paper 7 C E N T S 40c Weekly by Carrie* Dairymen Vote To Halt 8-Day Protest Strike Leaders Blame 'Crippling' Injunctions fjpr Failure Of Movement; Indicate New Strike Is Planned BRANCHVILLE, N.J. UP>—Most striking New Jersey and New York dairymen, blaming "crippl- ing" injunctions are lifting their eight-day-qld boycott of millf deal- ers. «' The Rev. John W. Dorney, ex- ecutive director of the Tri-State Master Dairy Farmers Guild, said however, that the stoppage was only temporary. He said the strike for high milk prices for dairymen is still "very encouraging" in Upstate New York. Charles Blanford. adminis- trator for the federal milk market, said only 3.8 per cent of the nor- mal supply in the tri-state area l_yas withheld Saturday as against 6.6 per cent Friday In Ogdensburg, N.Y., today, offi-1/" cials of the guild local said the Rev. Mr. Dorney had notified them by telephone this morning that the strike was off "temporarily." The local will meet tonight to re- organize. Meanwhile, sorne farm- ers in the area, unaware that the strike was off. continued to with- hold milk. However, the Norfolk Creamery, closed most of last week, reopened, and the Borden Ice Cream plant at Gouverneur. closed Saturday, announced it was reopening. Farmers in the Ogdensburg area carried on the boycott-longer than most other New York state farm- ers. Hearing to Resume In New York tomorrow, a fed- eral" hearing will resume on the controversial marketing arrange- ments for the three states. The boycott in New Jersey suf- fered a setback Saturday when members of- the Sussex County chapter of the guild, Dorney's home district, voted 105 to 30 to end the strike. Charles Hughes, president of the unit, said the de- cision "doesn't mean we are licked. "We have to get more men in the field and enlarge our organisa- tion." . In Hunterdon County, another of the state's major milk areas, the guild unit voted to let mem- bers deliver to creameries if they wanted to pending another meet- ing today. Gu#d members also stopped picketing in Orange Coun- ty, N.Y. The guild, which claims some 3,500 members of the 44,500 in the tri-state area, had called the boy- cott in hopes the other farmers "-would Join, 'They are seeking' a ^'SN nedia t e Withdrawal of Troops 4 Known Dead From Egypt Ordered by Israel; Number of Workers Caught • In Collapse of Earthen Wall Is Not Known Def. initely; One Man Saved STUDENTS IN CUSTODY — Two of several hundred -rioting Massachusetts Institute of Technology students are led b'y Cambridge police toward a waiting patrol wagon early March 3 during the height of a fracas that started over room and board increases by the school. Thirty-one students were arrested. (AP Wirephoto.) Taxpayer's Paradise: Revenue From Power Plant Supports Jersey Township $5.75 per hundred-weight price for milk from dairies. At one point, Dorney claimed 10,500 farmers were participating in the boycott but support waned in western New York state and a number x>f New Jersey creameries obtained injunctions against pick- eting. Senate to Quiz Dulles, Harold On Arms Slasl i WASHINGTON .UP>—Sen. Hum- phrey (D-Minn) said today heLwill summon Secretary of State Dulles and Harold E. Stassen .before a Senate subcommittee "to find out where w4e are headed on disarma- ment." A Humphrey and-, Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) raised the issue over the weekend that . Stq'te' Department absorption of Stassen's previously independent activities might mean the down-grading of efforts to get an'international arms agreement. However, Sen. Saltonstall of -Massachusetts./ chdiimari at the Senate to OK Mid-East Plan WASHINGTON (iTi—With over- whelming parage seemingly as- sured, the Senate decayed voting and set today aside for future de- bate on President Eisenhower's Middle Ealit resolution. Democratic leader Lyndon B. —J<>Kns<m-<-Tex4-efl4Jed-ano+her~8es-~ -sion for further speeches with plans to seek a vote Tuesday, if possible, at a session he said may open frs early'a* 9:30 a.m. The resolution would make, available military and economic assistance to Middle Eaj,t najions end state U.S. readiness to use armed force if necessary to resist ' overt CoVnrrfunist aggression. It cleared a major hurdle Saturday. " Responding xo an urgent appeal from President Eisenhower," the Senate defeated 5£-2|i^proposal to deny him the 20<W|;KoVi dol- lars hr asked in r me rgt^rH^ pend- ing- authority to deal with the troubled area. Elimination of the aid provision from the resolution. Eisenhower -«a id=in=*=l«tt«^whteh -Rernrbrrean leader Knowland read to the Sen- ate "would gravely impair our -ability to help these nations pre- serve their independence." Approval of the amendment, Eisenhower said, would suggest abroad "our country wants only to wage peace in terms of war.". Where to Find conference of all Republican sen- ators, said it was a "logical move" for President Eisenhower to make Stassen and his staff ^subject to policy directives by Dunes. "All of the facets of our foreign policy operations should be under trie secretary of state." Saltonstall said. "I do not believe there will be any. decline in our'efforts to push for world disarmament.'.' Humphrey, who heads a Senate foreign-relaJions subcomrrjjtJe§rCn. disarmament, said he wants Dulles and Stassen to explain how dis- armament studies will be carried on under the new setup announced Friday ai the White House. He said he will call them for testimony after Dulles returns from tr_e *fortheoming Southeast Asia Treaty (SEATO) conference. Dulles leaves Friday for the Mjarch 11-13 meeting in Australia. HOLLAND TOWNSHIP. N.J. i/P)—If there's a heaven on earth for the poor struggling taxpayer, this rural township on the Dela- ware River is it. It's a tax paradise where every day that the sun rises, SI,000 pours into the municipal treasury —enough to give every inhabitant $250 a year. And not one cent comes from residents of this Hunt- erdon County farmland. In fact Holland Township is so rich, it levies a tiny tax just to keep the inhabitants in practice and. justify the tax collector's job. -\VfSon ' the township council meets at today's budget hearing, it will report a surplus of Qver a million'dollars. All this comes frorn the little known state gross receipts tax levied on the township's richest native—the giant Holland gener- ating .station of the New Jersey fower and Light Co. "Revenue §377,000 in V>6 Last year alone the tax brought in $377,054 for the township's 1,500 residents. There are no gold rush spending splurges here, however, Residents prefer to let the money go to their pocketbooks rather .than their heads. So the council spends it oil new roads-^$142,280 worth in the last •three .years—or schools. ' Some $187,500 will be turned over this (Concluded on Page Ten) ' LITTLE ROCK. Ark. </Pt — A crushing avalanche of rock and dirt fell on workmen at an ex- fcavating site in the Little Rock business district today killing; at least four. One man was rescued alive a few minutes after an earthen wall a half city block long collapsed at Sixth and Main in the heart of the business district. A witness, John Head, engineer 6n the excavating project, said the 20-foot-high dirt embankment gave way without warning. "I had just walked away from where the men were digging." be said. "The wall just collapsed. There was no chance for them to get away." The * workman rescued was standing further away, from the wall when it fell and was dug' out quickly. He suffered a broken leg and possible chest and internal'in- juries. Initially the scene was near panic. Screams of witnesses were heard and a crowd of several hun- dred pressed around the site which was being dug for the foundation and basement of a new. J. C. Pen- ney Store. Ambulances, fire and police res- cue squads helped a bulldozer crew push back the tons of rock and earth. Wives of the trapped workmen weeped hysterically as the rescue effort went on. Police- said there is little hope for the workmen still under sev- eral tons of rock and earth. Parliament's Approval Required DeValera May Return: Tension Rises in Ireland On Eve of State Election Auto Crashes Take 12 Lives ALBANY UP)—Twelve of 14 vic- tims of fatal accidents in New York State over the weekend died in highway crashes. In New' York " City, Myron Daratsos, 23, and his brother, Nicholas, 19, were drowned in the East River yesterday after falling from a rowboat. _____ Other victims were: Star Lake — Donald M. Van House, 13, struck by car Friday night; Westmoreland—Fred Richer, 46, truck skidded off highway and down embankment Friday night. Depew—Mrs. "Eleanor^Lano, 62. of Buffalo ralli'sinn n( far—md. Goset Yields Body of Child, Missing 5 Days BELLMAWR, N.J. UP> — The search for tiny Mary Jane Barker ended in a three by five closet of a vacant ranch' house here yester- day where a playmate found the huddled body of the pretty, blonde child. Six-yeaV-old Marie Frietta, visit- ing the newly built unoccupied house of her aunt, playfully threw open a closet door. Her puppy, which had disappeared along with Mary Jane last Monday bounded out, alive and frisky. On the floor, however, lay four-year-old Mary Jane, her .blonde tresses covered by the hood of her jacket. Starvation Caused Death A medical authority connected with the investigation — he de- clined to be identified—said the child probably died of fright and starvation after being trapped in the cold, dark closet. A patholo- gist said-a cursory examination gave no indication of "foul play'^ DUBLIN. Ireland M>i — Tension gripped IreJai.d today on election eve, sparked by fears that the outlawed Irish Republican Army might strike a dramatic gesture of defiance, -v Although the" campaign was the quietest since southern Ireland's 26 counties won independence in 192U. sptx'ial emergency preeau- -hons were taken along the jittery frontier separating the republic Irom the six British-ruled north- ern counties of Ireland. ressure From U.S. Said to Have Been Responsible For Move, Made Without Consulting Lawmakers,' Some Strongly Opposed to Back Down; Premier's Resignation in Order if Parliament Reverses Him Bridge i ...... ClAAftlfled Ads Comlo Page »,»••* Crossword Puttie S 11 10 10 Editorial* •'•*. 4 Ohltnarle* t if >,11,, i \ ..... ,,.,,..»<. 7 Sport* Page* % . . . ft, 6 Weather ft. N.Y. Man Admits Strangling Wife NEW YORK.I/PT— Instead of leaving today on a planned "sec- ond "honeymoon," a 55-year-old parking lot operator was charged with strangling his wife. ; Peter Mangini walked into ,a Bronx police station yesterday, authorities said, and blurted out;: "I just killed my, wife." A police car was dispatched to Mangini's home. There officers found his wife, Anne, 45, half-clad and sprawled across a bed. Red welts about her throat JPdicaJ^_j5he_Jiad-J}eep strangled. The husband was later charged with homicide. Police gave this account: Mangini and his wife 'of 21 years attended a wedding recep- tion Saturday night but began quarrelling. Mangini said.she had danced "with too TTftmy > other men" and neglected him. The argument continued when they awoke the next morning. "She slapped" me and I choked her with my hands," Mangini re- lated. He .then twjstcd a metal dog leash around her neck! Mangini said he and his wife had recently separated but de- cided to give it another ,4ry. When he gave hlntself up*-Mangini. had $800 and two airline tickets to Miami for what he said was a planned "second honeymoon." Indicted Texas Solon Resigns AUSTIN. Tex. wi—sin,,. n fn Jury Probing Vice in Utica UTICA UP> -An Oneida County- grand jury, opening an investiga.- Ih d statement n't| tion today—of—reported—vice—rrr UtiCa, will hear from an official of an organization that said it had found prostitution operating in a "semi-flagrant " manner" in the city. T* Dist. Atty. John M. Liddy said yesterday thai Paul Kinzie of New- York City, executive djrector of the. American Social Hygiene ^AlmnrniaTojrclty ponce ofTIcials James E. Cox. indicted on a charge of agreeing to accept a $5,- 000 bribe to kill a medical bill, submitted his resignation yester- day, but there was a question of whether it would be immediately accepted because that could halt a House, investigation of the case. Cox submitted the Tsurprise t res- ignation in a telegram to Gov. Price Daniels his horde* in ConTOPrTex., the-36 year-old legislator said he was resigning "since I now stand charged in a felony^ indictment and in view of the turmoil and investigations now underway in the House of Representatives." Cox was indicted by the Travis County grand jury on .a charge that^e^gn^~to-~fce7e^~$$000 to kill a bill he introduced that would in effect ban the practice of naturopathic medicine in Texas. The charge was originated by Dr. Howard Harmon of San An- tonio, president of the Texas Na- turopathic Physicians Assn. He said Cox offered to accept the bribe In a hotel room conversa- tion Feb. 20. Dr. Harmon submit- ted a tape recording of the alleged conversation with Cox. who claimed he agreed to take the mon- ey in a plan to trap "crooked lob- byists." Cox later fifed a bribery charge against Dr. Harmon, who denied It. Both men are free un der $5,000 bond. Gov. Daniel said he would take the rcsjgnatio tion, but he take no immediate action. train at grade crossing Saturday. Troy—Dr. Eichiro Asai, 36, car skidded off road down embank- ment Saturday.- Hudson Falls — Mrs. Florence Skelley, 28, Granville, hit by car Saturday. Red Creek—Archie Smith, 75, hit by car Saturday. Hudson — Daniel Skoda, seven months, riding in truck that hit tree Sunday. - • Dansville — Clayton E. Harry. 23, Buffalo, car skidded on ice and Hit tree Sunday. Roscoe—Frank B. Reynolds, 23, Cold Spring Harbor, and Miss Danielle F. Mamboury, 20. of Rocky River, Ohio, car and trac- tor-trailer collision yesterday. New York—Joseph Coseglia, 60, of Jersey City, N.J., hit by truck Friday night. New York—Heddy Hirsch, 62, struck by PUS Friday nipt-': nor was there any evidence the girl had been criminally"assaulted. A preliminary autopsy indicated Mary Jane had eaten nothing since she vanished. There was mute evidence on the inside of the closet door that the little girl may have kicked it repeatedly in an attempt to es- cape. The door has no lock. It can be opened readily from the out- side by a knob, but there is only a small turn-latch on the inside. Detectives said this latch was ex- tremely tight and difficult if not impossible, for a child of Mary Jane's age to turn, ^_ American - born! 74 - year - old hamon do Valera, in fighting trim though nearly blind, has wound up a strong campaign to win back the premiership. De Valera's Fianna Fail (Men of Destiny) ap- peared out front in the campaign- it.g for the republic's 18th nation- al election tomorrow. The election was forced by the resignation of a coalition govern- ment led for the past three years ("by John A. Costello, mild-man- nered 65-year old Dublin lawyer. Sinn Fein, political arm of the illegal IRA, has entered a slate of 19 parliamentary candidates for tomorrow's' Irish election as a showof_jdrength. The Sinn Fein- trsTsaythey would not take their seats in the Dail (Parliament) even if they won, as a protest against the partition of Ireland. The established political parties, though favoring uniting the coun- try, have condemned the IRA's recent armed raids into northern Ireland as a futile way of solving [ihe problem. Edward Garri'ty. BellmawT—po-|^ e -Q^ za str j p lice chief, said the brick, one-' story home had been searched three times since Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barker reporied.'their.little daughter missing arid he was "al- most positive" the closet had been checked. Garrity said there were no marks of violence on the child's body. A spokesman for the county prosecutor said nothing Would be announced until autopsy results were complete. Camden County Coroner Robert J. Blake said the child's vital organs would be sent to the state capital at Trenton for tests at the New Jersey police laboratory. The dog was sent to a.veterinar- ian for tests to determine how long it had gone without food. Ironically, the object of the big- gest search in the history of this southern New Jersey •community U.N. Assembly Awaits Notice Of Withdrawal UNITED NATIONS Up)- Israel planned {o, give the U.N. General Assembly further word today on TTs withdrawal from Egypt and By ROBERT TUCKMAN JERUSALEM (/B—Premier David Ben-Gurion gave the final go-ahead today for an immediate withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza strip and the Gulf of Aqaba coast. A government spokesman announced Ben-Gurion had , ordered, the Israeli army chief of staff, Maj.. Gen. Moshe Dayan, to invite Canadian Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, the. commander of the U.N. Emergency Force, to meet with him this afternoon "to discuss measures necessary to carry out the withdrawal of forces in accordance with the statement by the foreign minister, Mrs. Golda Meir." The announcement was made in advance of an appearance by Ben- Gurion before the Israeli Knesset (Parliament) at which the, griz- zled old premier was slated to re- affirm Israel's decision to pull out of the disputed areas, trusting to the United States and the United ' Nations for protection against a renewal of ^Egyptian shooting. Mrs. Meir had announced to the U.N. Assembly Friday that the Israeli troops would retire behind the 1JJ49 armistice lines. But op- position to -the decision m Israel resulted in instructions from Ben- Gurion to Ambassador'Abba Eban to seek "clarifications" of the as- surances' given/ by the United States. ' After, a weekend of cabinet meetings and conferences, .in- formed sources said the premier had finally gotten his divided gov- ernment's permission to pull the troops back. Ben-Gurion was said to be near exhaustion from his continuous round of' conferences over the weekend apd frequent telephone calls to the United States. 1—JB^Gurion's, withdrawal order, taken^oVer the'hVa'd of parliament, was unusual, if not unprecedented. Never In the nine-year history ^f Israel has a premier taken a ma- jor step such as this without going before parliamehtr The initial assumption by for- eign observers here was that Ben- Gurion acted under American pres- sure. He also was known to feel unwilling to reverse the decision to withdraw announced to the world by Israel last Friday. Angry Israeli Demonstrate Against Govt. ' JERUSALEM, Israel Sector <JP) — Bitter demonstrations erupted in Jerusalem tonight soon after Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion (•ordered withdrawal of Israeli troops from Egypt. Hundreds of persons marched through the. streets demanding that the Ben-Gurion government resign. "Stop the withdrawal," the crowd shouted. Police squads clashed with the demonstrators and made several arrests. of 5,213, was found only two blocks from her home, and only 50 feet from where Mrs. ^Mary Frietta "last saw her playing with the puppy of her own daughter in front of the Frietta home. sain ne wpuin lane in under", considera^ In. Indicated he would fo were among" tfiose who had been subpoenaed to testify. Liddy de- clined to say how many sub- poenas had been issued. Others summoned Include Pub- lic Safety Commissioner Leo Mil- ler.* deputy police chiefs Vincent Fiore and" James Lalno; and all persons named in the association's report, Liddy said. Miller is city police chief but 4 is on leave from that ,post while' serving as public safety commissioner. The Social Hygiene Assn. pre- sented its report to city officials No details were disclosed official- ly JjKt they were publishecl in Utf?a newspapers. The association frequently a_k.es aurh surveys-for the armed forces. It was not revealed who had asked lor the report on Ulica.'trc home.' IGLTumcoat—-f- 4 Returns Home OKLAHOMA CITY W—Former American solider Samuel David Hawkins, who remained with the Red" Chinese after the Korean War, was home tod.»y visiting with his jppjherJbr,the firet time uvieveh years. ; The slender, 23-year-old ex-GI flew here yesterday afternoon and was greeted by his mother, Mrs. Caxley Jones' of Oklahoma City, newsmen and some 400 other per- soris,-^ ^ . In a brief word to newsmen, the handsome Jlawkins declared, "I personally don't count, if I can help others from the mistakes I made." Hawkins was captured by the Communisms only two months aft- er his 17th birthday. He hadn't seen his mother since he was a 16-year-old soldier. The crowd at Municipal Alrpoft was generally friendly and one untdentifed woman made a point to ah»ke his hand, saying, "I'm a riew friend. I am so happy you The 80-nation Assembly was to convene at 3 p.m." - Word from Jerusalem was that Premier David .Ben-Gurion and a majority of his cabinet were rec- onciled to going ahead with the withdrawal despite considerable opposition from both government allies and opponents. During the morning, Ben-Gurion pave the final go-ahead for with- drawal and postponed until to- morrow a personal report to the Knesset_._(___»rliament), previously scheduled "for today. Debate on the government's de- cision is to be followed by a vote of confidence. Although two of the five government coalitioh parties said they opposed with- drawal, it was believed in Jerusa- lem a majority of the Knesset would -endorse a tiix>[>-TndfcontT" The Israel chief of staff, Gen. Moshe . Dayan, was scheduled to meet Maj. Gen. E. L. M.~Burns today , to discuss Israel's final withdrawal. An official announce- ment in Jerusalem said. The meeting was set for Lydda Airport in central Israel.• CoiiLladud ttTT Teachers Ask Tax^ Relief WASHINGTON WP) — Congress is !>eing asked to give the one million school teachers in this country a better break on their income tax. And some congressmen — like Rep. Jenkins (R-Ohio) of*the tax writing House Ways and Means Committee—are responding sym- pathetically. What the teachers want Is to be allowed to' list as a tax deduction shose expenses-they incur jn go- irig to summer school to improve their professional ability. Usually., federal tax officials won't allow them to do this. Jen- kins has introduced a bill to per- mit it. The case for this legislation was staged the Other day by an indig- nant Chicago teacher. Mrs. t Adah Mauer. In a -letter to Rep. O'Hara (D-Ill) she wrote: "Teachers are bitter over busi- nessmen being able to" entertain customers in the Stork Club and deduct the fun." At the same time. Mrs.. Mauer wrote, "We sit in stuffy lecture halls absorbing 'Plato, psychology and human dynamics, also-for the purpose of increasing our income, and can't deduct the tuition. "Not only is it not fair, it is an indictment of our American value system." —Aeeording—to-T-ErncsL-GiddinESt legislative official of the National ^Education Assn. the Internal Rev- enue Service sometimes d,°c s Per- mit these tuition expenses to be deducted. What Giddings cannot figure out, he said, is thai the deductions are disallowed whenever the «**• gets *u I'wHlcl- jon out of his or her added education. Premier Keeps Nixon Waiting ACCRA, Gold Coast (J&—Prime Minister K-X'ame Nkrumah re- ceived" Vice-President Nixon for a 35-minute chat today, nearly 24. hours after the U.S. delegate ar- rived for ceremonies making this colony the independent state of Ghana in . the British Common- weaj_th. TheN^ice president did not seem disturbeoSby the dejay in seeing the prime minister. Nixon was the first top foreign delegate-to be re- ceived. Richard A. Butler, Brit- ain's home secretary, who is here to attend the independence cere- monies next Wednesday, was the second to be received. He arrived as-Ntxorf-was-ieayirrp— r ~ NIXON ARRIVES —Vice Preeldeni Richard Nixon stands be- fore microphones *t airport In \r>r», Gold Coast, Africa, M he acknowledge* greetings en Ms fttfrlvfcl <l«r.h 3. At right Is Kojo Rotsle. * Geld Coast goverantnt »ffk-ui. (AP Photo by radio from Londosu) ..;• Still looking 'somewhat pale from a three-day siege of the flu, Nixon said "We had a very cor- dial and frank exchange, of views on relations between Ghana and (Concluded on Page Ten) Two Students Killed in Crash ROSCOE tm—Two Cornell Uni- versity students, one a nephew of a state supreme court justice, were killed yesterday when their auto and a tractor-trailer collided. Two other students vyerr injured. I* Killed were Prank' BrReynfMsv 23. of Cold Spring Harbor, said by state police to be a nephew of Justice Walter B. Reynolds, and Miss Danielle F. Mamboury, 20, of RoCky River, Ohio. Injured but not seriously, were Stephen D. Bailey. 22. of Ithaca, the driver, and William F. Torrey. 21, of Rye, who was hospitalized si Callicoon. Not injured were another stu- dent passenger. William Tuck. 21, of Syracuse, and the truck driver, Richard Zwart Jr., 41. of Middle- town. The Accident occurred on Route 17, state police said, when the car skidded on a curve and collided with the Jruck. State police said the' student! were returning to th<* campus at Ithaca, .after attending a weddirig on Long'Island. ~6 1 ,. . ' ' i Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: ^'SN te Withdrawal of Troops 4 Known Dead From Egypt ... › Newspaper4 › Amsterdam NY... · mal supply in the tri-state area l_yas withheld Saturday as against 6.6 per cent Friday

!

• Net Paid Circulation

•Over

13.7QO , i ' •

.Vol. LXXVIIL, No. 165

Weather*

Cloudy,

Cold

1 a

- 3

Recorder Established 183S— Democrat Established Consolidated 1693

1870 Amsterdam, N.Y., Monday,'March 4 , 1957 Full Associated Press Report by Leased Wirt Official City and County Paper 7 C E N T S 40c Weekly by Carrie*

Dairymen Vote To Halt 8-Day Protest Strike Leaders Blame 'Crippling'

Injunctions fjpr Failure Of Movement; Indicate New Strike Is Planned

BRANCHVILLE, N.J. UP>—Most striking New Jersey and New York dairymen, blaming "crippl­ing" injunctions are lifting their eight-day-qld boycott of millf deal­ers. «'

The Rev. John W. Dorney, ex­ecutive director of the Tri-State Master Dairy Farmers Guild, said however, that the stoppage was only temporary.

He said the strike for high milk prices for dairymen is still "very encouraging" in Upstate New York. Charles Blanford. adminis­trator for the federal milk market, said only 3.8 per cent of the nor­mal supply in the tri-state area l_yas withheld Saturday as against 6.6 per cent Friday

In Ogdensburg, N.Y., today, offi-1/" cials of the guild local said the Rev. Mr. Dorney had notified them by telephone this morning that the strike was off "temporarily." The local will meet tonight to re­organize. Meanwhile, sorne farm­ers in the area, unaware that the strike was off. continued to with­hold milk. However, the Norfolk Creamery, closed most of last week, reopened, and the Borden Ice Cream plant at Gouverneur. closed Saturday, announced it was reopening.

Farmers in the Ogdensburg area carried on the boycott-longer than most other New York state farm­ers.

Hearing to Resume In New York tomorrow, a fed­

eral" hearing will resume on the controversial marketing arrange­ments for the three states.

The boycott in New Jersey suf­fered a setback Saturday when members of- the Sussex County chapter of the guild, Dorney's home district, voted 105 to 30 to end the strike. Charles Hughes, president of the unit, said the de­cision "doesn't mean we are licked.

"We have to get more men in the field and enlarge our organisa­tion." . In Hunterdon County, another of the state's major milk areas, the guild unit voted to let mem­bers deliver to creameries if they wanted to pending another meet­ing today. Gu#d members also stopped picketing in Orange Coun­ty, N.Y.

The guild, which claims some 3,500 members of the 44,500 in the tri-state area, had called the boy­cott in hopes the other farmers

"-would Join, 'They are seeking' a

^ ' S N n e d i a t e Withdrawal of Troops 4 Known Dead From Egypt Ordered by Israel; Number of Workers Caught • In Collapse of Earthen

Wall Is Not Known Def. initely; One Man Saved

STUDENTS IN CUSTODY — Two of several hundred -rioting Massachusetts Institute of Technology students are led b'y Cambridge police toward a waiting patrol wagon early March 3 during the height of a fracas that started over room and board increases by the school. Thirty-one students were arrested. (AP Wirephoto.)

Taxpayer's Paradise:

Revenue From Power Plant Supports Jersey Township

$5.75 per hundred-weight price for milk from dairies.

At one point, Dorney claimed 10,500 farmers were participating in the boycott but support waned in western New York state and a number x>f New Jersey creameries obtained injunctions against pick­eting.

Senate to Quiz Dulles, Harold On Arms Slasl i WASHINGTON .UP>—Sen. Hum­

phrey (D-Minn) said today heLwill summon Secretary of State Dulles and Harold E. Stassen .before a Senate subcommittee "to find out where w4e are headed on disarma­ment." A

Humphrey and-, Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) raised the issue over the weekend that . Stq'te' Department absorption of Stassen's previously independent activities might mean the down-grading of efforts to get an' international arms agreement.

However, Sen. Saltonstall of -Massachusetts./ chdiimari at the

Senate to OK Mid-East Plan WASHINGTON (iTi—With over­

whelming p a r a g e seemingly as­sured, the Senate decayed voting and set today aside for future de­bate on President Eisenhower's Middle Ealit resolution.

Democratic leader Lyndon B. —J<>Kns<m-<-Tex4-efl4Jed-ano+her~8es-~

-sion for further speeches with plans to seek a vote Tuesday, if possible, at a session he said may open frs early 'a* 9:30 a.m.

The resolution w o u l d make, available military and economic assistance to Middle Eaj,t najions end state U.S. readiness to use armed force if necessary to resist

' overt CoVnrrfunist aggression. It cleared a major hurdle Saturday. " Responding xo an urgent appeal

from President Eisenhower," the Senate defeated 5£-2 | i^proposa l to deny him the 20<W|;KoVi dol­lars hr asked in r me rgt^rH^ pend­ing- authority to deal with the troubled area.

Elimination of the aid provision from the resolution. Eisenhower

- « a id=in=*=l«tt«^whteh -Rernrbrrean leader Knowland read to the Sen­ate "would gravely impair our

-ability to help these nations pre­serve their independence."

Approval of the amendment, Eisenhower said, would suggest abroad "our country wants only to wage peace in terms of war ." .

Where to Find

conference of all Republican sen­ators, said it was a "logical move" for President Eisenhower to make Stassen and his staff ^subject to policy directives by Dunes.

"All of the facets of our foreign policy operations should be under trie secretary of state." Saltonstall said. "I do not believe there will be any. decline in our 'efforts to push for world disarmament.'.'

Humphrey, who heads a Senate foreign-relaJions subcomrrjjtJe§rCn. disarmament, said he wants Dulles and Stassen to explain how dis­armament studies will be carried on under the new setup announced Friday ai the White House.

He said he will call them for testimony after Dulles returns from tr_e *fortheoming Southeast Asia Treaty (SEATO) conference. Dulles leaves Friday for the Mjarch 11-13 meeting in Australia.

HOLLAND TOWNSHIP. N.J. i/P)—If there's a heaven on earth for the poor struggling taxpayer, this rural township on the Dela­ware River is it.

I t 's a tax paradise where every day that the sun rises, SI,000 pours into the municipal treasury —enough to give every inhabitant $250 a year. And not one cent comes from residents of this Hunt­erdon County farmland.

In fact Holland Township is so rich, it levies a tiny tax just to keep the inhabitants in practice and. justify the tax collector's job. -\VfSon ' the township council

meets at today's budget hearing, it will report a surplus of Qver a million'dollars.

All this comes frorn the little known state gross receipts tax levied on the township's richest native—the giant Holland gener-ating .station of the New Jersey fower and Light Co.

"Revenue §377,000 in V>6 Last year alone the tax brought

in $377,054 for the township's 1,500 residents.

There are no gold rush spending splurges here, however, Residents prefer to let the money go to their pocketbooks rather .than their heads.

So the council spends it oil new roads-^$142,280 worth in the last •three .years—or schools. ' Some $187,500 will be turned over this

(Concluded on Page Ten) '

LITTLE ROCK. Ark. </Pt — A crushing avalanche of rock and dirt fell on workmen at an ex-

fcavating site in the Little Rock business district today killing; at least four.

One man was rescued alive a few minutes after an earthen wall a half city block long collapsed at Sixth and Main in the heart of the business district.

A witness, John Head, engineer 6n the excavating project, said the 20-foot-high dirt embankment gave way without warning.

"I had just walked away from where the men were digging." be said. "The wall just collapsed. There was no chance for them to get away."

The * workman rescued was standing further away, from the wall when it fell and was dug' out quickly. He suffered a broken leg and possible chest and internal'in-juries.

Initially the scene was near panic. Screams of witnesses were heard and a crowd of several hun­dred pressed around the site which was being dug for the foundation and basement of a new. J. C. Pen­ney Store.

Ambulances, fire and police res­cue squads helped a bulldozer crew push back the tons of rock and earth. Wives of the trapped workmen weeped hysterically as the rescue effort went on.

Police- said there is little hope for the workmen still under sev­eral tons of rock and earth.

Parliament's Approval Required DeValera May Return:

Tension Rises in Ireland On Eve of State Election

Auto Crashes Take 12 Lives ALBANY UP)—Twelve of 14 vic­

tims of fatal accidents in New York State over the weekend died in highway crashes.

In New' York " City, Myron Daratsos, 23, and his brother, Nicholas, 19, were drowned in the East River yesterday after falling from a rowboat. _____

Other victims were: Star Lake — Donald M. Van

House, 13, struck by car Friday night;

Westmoreland—Fred Richer, 46, truck skidded off highway and down embankment Friday night.

Depew—Mrs. "Eleanor^Lano, 62. of Buffalo ralli'sinn n( far—md.

Goset Yields Body of Child, Missing 5 Days

BELLMAWR, N.J. UP> — The search for tiny Mary Jane Barker ended in a three by five closet of a vacant ranch' house here yester­day where a playmate found the huddled body of the pretty, blonde child.

Six-yeaV-old Marie Frietta, visit­ing the newly built unoccupied house of her aunt, playfully threw open a closet door. Her puppy, which had disappeared along with Mary Jane last Monday bounded out, alive and frisky. On the floor, however, lay four-year-old Mary Jane, her .blonde tresses covered by the hood of her jacket.

Starvation Caused Death A medical authority connected

with the investigation — he de­clined to be identified—said the child probably died of fright and starvation after being trapped in the cold, dark closet. A patholo­gist sa id-a cursory examination gave no indication of "foul play'^

DUBLIN. Ireland M>i — Tension gripped IreJai.d today on election eve, sparked by fears that the outlawed Irish Republican Army might strike a dramatic gesture of defiance, -v

Although the" campaign was the quietest since southern Ireland's 26 counties won independence in 192U. sptx'ial emergency preeau--hons were taken along the jittery frontier separating the republic Irom the six British-ruled north­ern counties of Ireland.

ressure From U.S. Said to Have Been Responsible For Move, Made Without Consulting Lawmakers,' Some Strongly Opposed to Back Down; Premier 's Resignation in Order if Parliament Reverses Him

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N.Y. Man Admits Strangling Wife

NEW Y O R K . I / P T — Instead of leaving today on a planned "sec­ond "honeymoon," a 55-year-old parking lot operator was charged with strangling his wife. ;

Peter Mangini walked into ,a Bronx police station yesterday, authorities said, and blurted out;: "I just killed my, wife." A police car was dispatched to Mangini's home.

There officers found his wife, Anne, 45, half-clad and sprawled across a bed. Red welts about her throat JPdicaJ^_j5he_Jiad-J}eep strangled.

The husband was later charged with homicide.

Police gave this account: Mangini and his wife 'of 21

years attended a wedding recep­tion Saturday night but began quarrelling. Mangini said.she had danced "with too • TTftmy > other men" and neglected him.

The argument continued when they awoke the next morning. "She slapped" me and I choked her with my hands," Mangini re­lated. He .then twjstcd a metal dog leash around her neck!

Mangini said he and his wife had recently separated but de­cided to give it another ,4ry. When he gave hlntself up*-Mangini. had $800 and two airline tickets to Miami for what he said was a planned "second honeymoon."

Indicted Texas Solon Resigns

AUSTIN. Tex. wi—sin , , . n f n

Jury Probing Vice in Utica

UTICA UP> -An Oneida County-grand jury, opening an investiga.-

Ih d statement n't| tion today—of—reported—vice—rrr UtiCa, will hear from an official of an organization that said it had found prostitution operating in a "semi-flagrant " manner" in the city. T *

Dist. Atty. John M. Liddy said yesterday thai Paul Kinzie of New-York City, executive djrector of the. American Social Hygiene ^AlmnrniaTojrcl ty ponce ofTIcials

James E. Cox. indicted on a charge of agreeing to accept a $5,-000 bribe to kill a medical bill, submitted his resignation yester­day, but there was a question of whether it would be immediately accepted because that could halt a House, investigation of the case.

Cox submitted the Tsurpriset res­ignation in a telegram to Gov. Price Daniels his horde* in ConTOPrTex., the-36 year-old legislator said he was resigning "since I now stand charged in a felony^ indictment and in view of the turmoil and investigations now underway in the House of Representatives."

Cox was indicted by the Travis County grand jury on .a charge t h a t ^ e ^ g n ^ ~ t o - ~ f c e 7 e ^ ~ $ $ 0 0 0 to kill a bill he introduced that would in effect ban the practice of naturopathic medicine in Texas.

The charge was originated by Dr. Howard Harmon of San An­tonio, president of the Texas Na­turopathic Physicians Assn. He said Cox offered to accept the bribe In a hotel room conversa­tion Feb. 20. Dr. Harmon submit­ted a tape recording of the alleged conversation w i t h Cox. w h o claimed he agreed to take the mon­ey in a plan to trap "crooked lob­byists." Cox later fifed a bribery charge against Dr. Harmon, who denied It. Both men are free un der $5,000 bond.

Gov. Daniel said he would take the rcsjgnatio tion, but he take no immediate action.

train at grade crossing Saturday. Troy—Dr. Eichiro Asai, 36, car

skidded off road down embank­ment Saturday.-

Hudson Falls — Mrs. Florence Skelley, 28, Granville, hit by car Saturday.

Red Creek—Archie Smith, 75, hit by car Saturday.

Hudson — Daniel Skoda, seven months, riding in truck that hit tree Sunday. - •

Dansville — Clayton E. Harry. 23, Buffalo, car skidded on ice and Hit tree Sunday.

Roscoe—Frank B. Reynolds, 23, Cold Spring Harbor, and Miss Danielle F. Mamboury, 20. of Rocky River, Ohio, car and trac­tor-trailer collision yesterday.

New York—Joseph Coseglia, 60, of Jersey City, N.J., hit by truck Friday night.

New York—Heddy Hirsch, 62, struck by PUS Friday nipt-':

nor was there any evidence the girl had been criminally"assaulted. A preliminary autopsy indicated Mary Jane had eaten nothing since she vanished.

There was mute evidence on the inside of the closet door that the little girl may have kicked it repeatedly in an attempt to es­cape. The door has no lock. It can be opened • readily from the out­side by a knob, but there is only a small turn-latch on the inside. Detectives said this latch was ex­tremely tight and difficult if not impossible, for a child of Mary Jane's age to turn, ^_

American - born! 74 - year - old hamon do Valera, in fighting trim though nearly blind, has wound up a strong campaign to win back the premiership. De Valera's Fianna Fail (Men of Destiny) ap-peared out front in the campaign-it.g for the republic's 18th nation­al election tomorrow.

The election was forced by the resignation of a coalition govern­ment led for the past three years

("by John A. Costello, mild-man­nered 65-year old Dublin lawyer.

Sinn Fein, political arm of the illegal IRA, has entered a slate of 19 parliamentary candidates for tomorrow's' Irish election as a showof_jdrength. The Sinn Fein-t rsTsaythey would not take their seats in the Dail (Parliament) even if they won, as a protest against the partition of Ireland.

The established political parties, though favoring uniting the coun­try, have condemned the IRA's recent armed raids into northern Ireland as a futile way of solving

[ihe problem.

Edward Garri'ty. BellmawT—po-|^e -Q^ z a s t r j p lice chief, said the brick, one-' story home had been searched three times since Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barker reporied.'their.little daughter missing arid he was "al­most positive" the closet had been checked. Garrity said there were no marks of violence on the child's body.

A spokesman for the county prosecutor said nothing Would be announced until autopsy results were complete.

Camden County Coroner Robert J. Blake said the child's vital organs would be sent to the state capital at Trenton for tests at the New Jersey police laboratory. The dog was sent to a.veterinar­ian for tests to determine how long it had gone without food.

Ironically, the object of the big-gest search in the history of this southern New Jersey •community

U.N. Assembly Awaits Notice Of Withdrawal

UNITED NATIONS Up)- Israel planned {o, give the U.N. General Assembly further word today on TTs withdrawal from Egypt and

By ROBERT TUCKMAN JERUSALEM (/B—Premier David Ben-Gurion gave the

final go-ahead today for an immediate withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza strip and the Gulf of Aqaba coast.

A government spokesman announced Ben-Gurion had , ordered, the Israeli army chief of staff, Maj.. Gen. Moshe Dayan, to invite Canadian Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, the. commander of the U.N. Emergency Force, to meet with him this afternoon "to discuss measures necessary to carry out the withdrawal of forces in accordance with the statement by the foreign minister, Mrs. Golda Meir."

• The announcement was made in advance of an appearance by Ben-Gurion before the Israeli Knesset (Parliament) at which the, griz­zled old premier was slated to re­affirm Israel's decision to pull out of the disputed areas, trusting to the United States and the United ' Nations for protection against a renewal of ^Egyptian shooting.

Mrs. Meir had announced to the U.N. Assembly Friday that the Israeli troops would retire behind the 1JJ49 armistice lines. But op­position to -the decision m Israel resulted in instructions from Ben-Gurion to Ambassador'Abba Eban to seek "clarifications" of the as­surances' given/ by the United States.

' After, a • weekend of cabinet meetings and conferences, .in­formed sources said the premier had finally gotten his divided gov­ernment's permission to pull the troops back. „

Ben-Gurion was said to be near exhaustion from his continuous round of' conferences over the weekend apd frequent telephone calls to the United States.

1—JB^Gurion's, withdrawal order, taken^oVer the'hVa'd of parliament, was unusual, if not unprecedented. Never In the nine-year history ^ f Israel has a premier taken a ma­jor step such as this without going before parliamehtr

The initial assumption by for­eign observers here was that Ben-Gurion acted under American pres­sure. He also was known to feel unwilling to reverse the decision to withdraw announced to the world by Israel last Friday.

Angry Israeli Demonstrate Against Govt.

' JERUSALEM, Israel Sector <JP) — Bitter demonstrations erupted in Jerusalem tonight soon after Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion

(•ordered withdrawal of Israeli troops from Egypt.

Hundreds of persons marched through t h e . streets demanding that the Ben-Gurion government resign.

"Stop the withdrawal," the crowd shouted.

Police squads clashed with the demonstrators and made several arrests.

of 5,213, was found only two blocks from her home, and only 50 feet from where Mrs. ^Mary Frietta "last s a w her playing with the puppy of her own daughter in front of the Frietta home.

sain ne wpuin lane in under", considera^ In. Indicated he would fo

were among" tfiose who had been subpoenaed to testify. Liddy de­clined to say how many sub­poenas had been issued.

Others summoned Include Pub­lic Safety Commissioner Leo Mil­ler.* deputy police chiefs Vincent Fiore and" James Lalno; and all persons named in the association's report, Liddy said. Miller is city police chief but4 is on leave from that ,post while' serving as public safety commissioner.

The Social Hygiene Assn. pre­sented its report to city officials No details were disclosed official­ly JjKt they were publishecl in Utf?a newspapers.

The a s s o c i a t i o n frequently a_k.es aurh surveys-for the armed

forces. It was not revealed who had asked lor the report on Ulica. ' trc home. '

IGLTumcoat—-f-4

Returns Home OKLAHOMA CITY W—Former

American solider Samuel David Hawkins, who remained with the Red" Chinese after the Korean War, was home tod.»y visiting with his j pp jhe r Jb r , t he firet time uvieveh years. ;

The slender, 23-year-old ex-GI flew here yesterday afternoon and was greeted by his mother, Mrs. Caxley Jones' of Oklahoma City, newsmen and some 400 other per-soris,-^ ^ . In a brief word to newsmen, the handsome Jlawkins declared, "I personally don't count, if I can help others from the mistakes I made."

Hawkins was captured by the Communisms only two months aft­er his 17th birthday. He hadn't seen his mother since he was a 16-year-old soldier.

The crowd at Municipal Alrpoft was generally friendly and one untdentifed woman made a point to ah»ke his hand, saying, "I 'm a riew friend. I am so happy you

The 80-nation Assembly was to convene at 3 p.m." - Word from Jerusalem was that Premier David .Ben-Gurion and a majority of his cabinet were rec­onciled to going ahead with the withdrawal despite considerable opposition from both government allies and opponents.

During the morning, Ben-Gurion pave the final go-ahead for with­drawal and postponed until to­morrow a personal report to the Knesset_._(___»rliament), previously scheduled "for today.

Debate on the government's de­cision is to be followed by a vote of confidence. Although two of the five government coalitioh parties said they opposed with­drawal, it was believed in Jerusa­lem a majority of the Knesset would -endorse a tiix>[>-TndfcontT"

The Israel chief of staff, Gen. Moshe . Dayan, was scheduled to meet Maj. Gen. E. L. M.~Burns today , to discuss Israel's final withdrawal. An official announce­ment in Jerusalem said.

The meeting was set for Lydda Airport in central Israel.•

CoiiLladud ttTT

Teachers Ask Tax̂ Relief

WASHINGTON WP) — Congress is !>eing asked to give the one million school teachers in this country a better break on their income tax.

And some congressmen — like Rep. Jenkins (R-Ohio) of*the tax writing House Ways and Means Committee—are responding sym­pathetically.

What the teachers want Is to be allowed to' list as a tax deduction shose expenses-they incur jn go-irig to summer school to improve their professional ability.

Usually., federal tax officials won't allow them to do this. Jen­kins has introduced a bill to per­mit it.

The case for this legislation was staged the Other day by an indig­nant Chicago teacher. Mrs. tAdah Mauer. In a -letter to Rep. O'Hara (D-Ill) she wrote:

"Teachers are bitter over busi­nessmen being able to" entertain customers in the Stork Club and deduct the fun."

At the same time. Mrs.. Mauer wrote, "We sit in stuffy lecture halls absorbing 'Plato, psychology and human dynamics, also-for the purpose of increasing our income, and can't deduct the tuition.

"Not only is it not fair, it is an indictment of our American value system." —Aeeording—to-T-ErncsL-GiddinESt legislative official of the National

^Education Assn. the Internal Rev­enue Service sometimes d,°cs Per­mit these tuition expenses to be deducted.

What Giddings cannot figure out, he said, is thai the deductions are disallowed whenever the «**• gets *u I'wHlcl- jon out of his or her added education.

Premier Keeps Nixon Waiting ACCRA, Gold Coast (J&—Prime

Minister K-X'ame Nkrumah re­ceived" Vice-President Nixon for a 35-minute chat today, nearly 24. hours after the U.S. delegate ar­rived for ceremonies making this colony the independent state of Ghana in . the British Common-weaj_th.

TheN^ice president did not seem disturbeoSby the dejay in seeing the prime minister. Nixon was the first top foreign delegate-to be re­ceived. Richard A. Butler, Brit­ain's home secretary, who is here to attend the independence cere­monies next Wednesday, was the second to be received. He arrived as-Ntxorf-was-ieayirrp— r~

NIXON ARRIVES — V i c e Preeldeni Richard Nixon stands be­fore microphones *t airport In \r>r», Gold Coast, Africa, M he acknowledge* greetings en Ms fttfrlvfcl <l«r.h 3. At right Is Kojo Rotsle. * Geld Coast gove ran tn t »ffk-ui. (AP Photo by radio from Londosu) . . ; •

Still looking 'somewhat pale from a three-day siege of the flu, Nixon said "We had a very cor­dial and frank exchange, of views on relations between Ghana and

(Concluded on Page Ten)

Two Students Killed in Crash

ROSCOE tm—Two Cornell Uni­versity students, one a nephew of a state supreme court justice, were killed yesterday when their auto and a tractor-trailer collided. Two other students vyerr injured.

I* Killed were Prank' BrReynfMsv 23. of Cold Spring Harbor, said by state police to be a nephew of Justice Walter B. Reynolds, and Miss Danielle F. Mamboury, 20, of RoCky River, Ohio.

Injured but not seriously, were Stephen D. Bailey. 22. of Ithaca, the driver, and William F. Torrey. 21, of Rye, who was hospitalized si Callicoon.

Not injured were another stu­dent passenger. William Tuck. 21, of Syracuse, and the truck driver, Richard Zwart Jr., 41. of Middle-town. The Accident occurred on Route 17, state police said, when the car skidded on a curve and collided with the Jruck.

Sta te police said the' student! were returning to th<* campus a t Ithaca, .after attending a weddirig on Long'Island.

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