the Montana Standard, Tuesday, June 4, 1957 Bonds and Fines Collected In City Court A defendant giving the name of Chester C. Turkman, arraigned in police court Monday on charges of causing a disturbance and resisting lawful arrest, pleaded guilty to both charges and was sentenced to pay fine of $25 first charge and $50 on the second. The court heard testimony to the effeet that the defendant while being booked on the disturbance charge staged a one-man riot in and near the city jail during which he ripped a jacket off Asst. Police Chief Vern Maddock and bit Officer Larry Connors on the arm. defendant giving the name of William F.
Willoughby was arraigned on charges of reckless driving and destruction of private property by damaging a water hydrant. He pleaded guilty both charges and was fined $150 for reckless driving. The court reserved decision on the destruction charge. Officer Ed Moser testified fo for the city. A defendant giving the name of Louis Sertich was convicted of reckless driving on the testimony of Officer Cyril Kohn and was fined $150.
A total of $350 in bonds was forfeited in the name of George Harkonen on the charges and in the amounts indicated: Reckless driving, $100; hit and run driving by colliding with parked cars and failing to stop, two charges, $100 each; destruction of city property by colliding with a parking meter, $50. Other reckless driving bonds were forfeited in the names of William F. Triplett, $100, and Joe Gurule, $25. Bonds posted on charges of speeding were forfeited in the following names at $25 each: High Mempa, John Doe, Dale Cross. Disturbance charges resulted in forfeiture of $10 bonds in the names of Curtis Anderson, Oliver Davis, Irene Davis, Anderes Tortorica, Jose Romero, Jimmy Cordova, Wirt Barrett, Andrew Martinez and Haynes Sapp.
An Allan Ferguson who pleaded guilty to causing a disturbance was fined $50 after the court heard testimony from the complaining witness, Mrs. Julia Crilly. Four defendants, tried together on a disturbance complaint, lodged against them by Ralph Bridger, were convicted and each fined $10, suspended in each case. The defendants gave the names of Jerri Harrison, Eddie Harrison, Lillian Rodd and Donald DeWolf. A May DeWolf, arraigned on a separate complaint by the complainant, also received same, suspended $10 fine.
A defendant giving the name of Melvin Bowen, charged with having caused a disturbance by roughing up an older man on the street, pleaded guilty and was fined $30. Officers Connors and Joseph Zo benica, who testified for the city, said they had witnessed the attack by the defendant, about 23, on the other man, about 45. A defendant giving the name of Candelaria Boua, charged with causing a disturbance and resisting arrest by was fined $25 on the disturbance charge and $50 for resisting arrest. Also fined $50 for resistance and $25 for causing a disturbance was a defendant giving the name of Louis Gurule. In other disturbance cases coming before the.
court, $25 bonds were forfeited in the names of Theodofil Lopez, Ted Shropshire and James Sullivan. A defendant giving the name of Clarence A. Foster pleaded guilty to state vagrancy. The court after hearing testimony from Officers Larry Tromly and John T. Sullivan sentenced the defendant to 15 days in the county jail and suspended the sentence conditional upon the defendant's future good behavior.
A defendant giving the name of Charlie D. Brown who pleaded guilty to state vagrancy was given a 60-day county jail sentence with a stay of execution on the condition that he leave Butte within that time. Bonds on traffie charges were forfeited in the names of Leo Stevens, Improper license plates, $50; Max Marquardt, improper 11- cense plates and improper muffler, $20; Tony Antonovich, improper muffler and no city driving permit, $27; Jose Martinez, improper plates and improper $22, and Gordon Marquette, improper plates, $10. A total of $95 was forfeited on minor traffic violation charges. The Chinese used paper money as early as the Thirteenth Century.
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Montana Ph. 4954 12,000 Scientists (Continued From Page One) seriously defective children that will be born in future generations. "So long As these weapons are in the hands of only three powers an agreement for their control is feasible. If testing continues, and the profession of these weapons, spreads to additional governments, the danger of outbreak of a cataclysmic nuclear war through the reckless action of some irresponsible national leader will be greatly increased. "An international agreement stop the testing of nuclear bombs now could serve as a first step toward a more general disarmament and the ultimate effective abolition of nuclear weapons, averting the possibility of a nuclear war that would be a catastrophe to all humanity.
"We have in common with our fellow men a deep concern for the welfare of all human beings. As scientists we have knowledge of the dangers involved and therefore a special responsibility to make those dangers known. 4 "We deem it imperative that mediate action be taken to effect an international agreement to stop the testing of all nuclear weapons." In Washington, White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty declined comment on the appeal. But Sen.
Anderson (D-NM), vice chairman of the Senate-House Committee on Atomic Energy, said: "Without doubt international control of the testing of nuclear weapons is now necessary and be the first important step toward ending the threat of nuclear war. statement of the 2,000 scientists should serve to focus attention on that situation and should help start conferences looking toward control of the amount of fission products put yearly into the Du Pont-GM (Continued From Page One) Judge Labuy said in Chicago when informed the high court's decision. "There are only two ways the Supreme Court can rule on a district court decision, either for you or against you." Labuy said he planned to read the opinion as soon as possible to learn which points of law are cited as bases for the trial order. In sending the case back to district court, the Supreme Court ordered a further hearing to determine "the equitable relief necessary and appropriate in the public interest to eliminate the effects of the acquisition (of GM's stock by Du Pont) offensive to the Brennan' opinion left unanswered for the time being whether Du Pont must dispose of all of its GM stock, or might be allowed to retain smaller percentage. That decision, in the first instance, be for district court to make.
In any event, however, Brennan's decision made clear that the present Du Pont GM relationship must end. Brennan said the primary issue was whether Du Pont's commanding position as GM's supplier of finishes and fabrics was achieved on competitive merit alone or because of its acquisition of the GM stock and the consequent close intercompany relationship. Brennan wrote that Section 7 of the Clayton Act is "designed to arrest in its incipiency not only the substantial lessening of competition from the acquisition by one corporation of the whole or any part of the stock of a competing corporation, but also to arrest in their incipiency restraints or monopolies in a relevant market. He said the section is violated whether or not actual restraints or monopolies, or the substantial lessening of competition, have occurred or are intended. He noted that Section 7 exempts acquisitions solely for investment "but only if, and so long as, the stock is not used by voting or otherwise to bring about, or in attempting to bring about, the substantial lessening of competition." Dave Beck Today Will Answer On Tax Evasion TACOMA, Wash.
(P) Teamsters President Dave Beck answers in U. S. District Court here Tuesday to government charges of income tax evasion. The onetime laundry worker who rose to become head of one of the nation's largest unions is scheduled to for indictment arraignment returned to plead an a federal grand jury here last May 1. The government charges in the indictment that Beck and his wife, in a joint return, evaded $56,000 in federal income taxes in 1950.
A second count accused Beck of aiding in the preparation of a fraudulent income tax return for a subsidiary agency of the Teamsters Union. Beck has been at liberty on $5,000 bond. Hospital Notes ST. JAMES Admitted--Mrs. Andrew Geddis, 559 S.
Arizona; Mrs. Catherine Torrance, 307 S. Idaho; Mrs. Margaret Murphy, 409 W. Granite; Mrs.
Catherine Knowles, Boulder; Mark J. Noonan, 1621 Whitman; Mrs. Esther Morgan, 3120 Bayard; Steven M. Hinick, 1111 W. Galena; Ann Louise Mason, 1160 W.
Silver; Roberta Lee Smith, 3406 Kennedy; Joyce Peterson, 1006 Silver Bow Homes; Claude N. Maiden, 2035 Florence; Mrs. Margaret Murphy, 409 W. Granite; Charles Fulwiler, 1301 S. Montana; J.
D. Turner, 26 E. Woolman; Constance Louvaris, 1809 Silver Bow Homes; Mrs. William L. Wilcox, 226 W.
Gold; Mrs. Clyde Peale, 805 N. Main; Mrs. Edward W. Olds, 2207 Grand; Mrs.
Peter M. Favero, 1811 Howard; Adolf W. Tamcke, Deer Lodge; John Woods, 527 Broadway; Mrs. Mina Cox. Mineral Point, Leighton R.
Dunaway, 705 Sixth. Dismissed--Thomas J. Matskus, 4 Leatherwood, Meaderville; Mrs. Susie Innala, 1720 Mrs. Earl D.
Plackett and son, Yale: Mrs. Thomas J. Seymour and daughter, 521 W. Aluminum. COMMUNITY MEMORIAL Admitted David Reese, 1830 Monroe; Maurice Barry, 716 E.
Mercury; Mrs. Josephine Duntley, Three Forks; Mrs. Anita R. Wilke, Wisdom; Mrs. Coleman, 1718 Tammany, Anaconda; Mrs.
Mary J. Espinoza, 422 E. Broadway: Master Dennis E. Harrington, 701 Alder, Anaconda; Master William M. McLeod, Philipsburg; Mrs.
Helen M. Anderson, 2011 Harvard; Ray E. Pierson, Route 1, Anaconda; Johnny T. Arthurs, Pullman, Edmund M. McCarthy, 23 W.
Quartz; Mrs. Anna C. Swan, 2001 S. Wyoming; Vicki Hughes, 1219 E. Third, Anaconda; Mrs.
Frances L. Welter, 1836 Oregon. Dismissed Mrs. Helen Norrid, Copper; Mrs. Esther Steiner, Alder; Vern Meeks, Harrison; Charles N.
Rusek, 1728 Chestnut, Helena; Mrs. Frank Metully and Charles Crnkovich 944 daughter, 414 Kemper: Mrs. W. Woolman; Master Timothy R. and Master Thomas E.
Boston, 1017 Oregon; Mrs. Dean Kleinhans and daughter, 1816 Ogden, Anaconda; John A. Hall, 935 Caledonia; Mrs. Ella Snyder, 2541 Harvard. President to See (Continued From Page One) House staff also will be on board the Saratoga.
Eisenhower plans to fly from Washington Thursday morning, taking off at 7:45 a.m., to the Mayport naval base, near Jacksonville, Fla. He scheduled to arrive there at 10:30 a.m. and will go aboard the Saratoga immediately. The supercarrier will return to the Mayport base at 1:45 p.m. Friday, and Eisenhower is scheduled to leave for Washington by plane about 4:30 p.m.
From National Airport here he will drive to the Sheraton-Park Hotel. for an address Friday evening at a rally sponsored by the Republican National Committee. The President will speak at the rally. Scheduled aboard the Saratoga Thursday afternoon and evening are what the Navy calls "offensive demonstrations" by the carrier and its latest type jet planes. Hagerty said the demonstrations will include "simulated delivery of both atomic and conventional weapons." Hagerty indicated that planes other than those based on the Saratoga may take part in the Thursday-Friday maneuvers, but would not go into details.
White House May Get New Annex WASHINGTON (A) The White House "outmoded, overcrowded, inefficient," a new report says may get a modern annex. The report, submitted to President Eisenhower Monday by a study commission, calls for a 350,000 expansion program which would involve razing the dingy old State War Navy Building next door to the executive mansion. Eisenhower's staff apparently is sold already on the proposal. Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said current occupants of the White House believe the plan "is the, best suited to the purposes of the President and his office." Congress, in its present economy mood, isn't likely to vote money for any such program at this session.
In any the work could hardly be completed before the end of Eisenhower's second term. O'Connor to Wed NEW YORK (P -Basil O'Connor 65, head of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, and Hazel Royall, 43, Warm Springs, obtained a marriage license first wife, the former Elvira Miller O'Connor, died in 1955. The bridge-to-be, director of functional therapy at Warm Springs, was divorced in 1956 from Charles Dudley Stephens. The couple did not disclose their I marriage plans. IN DEFENSE OF THE PRICE OF ALASKA FISH FERTILIZER ASK YOUR Compared to cheap-branded, "just-as-good" competiters.
is approved by Good can leaf feed any type plant or root "A money back guarantee you're not dees not contain any chemical boasters or cheap Allers of any kind. it just as much time to apply a cheap imitation, with questionable results. It is made by the largest manufacturer of fish fertizer in the world. IP's offered coast to coast and border to border. MANUFACTURING OF FISH FERTILIZER IS OUR BUSINESS- -NOT A SIDE LINE.
(LOOK FOR THE TOTEM POLE AND BE SURE.) FERTILIZER WASHINGTON Mrs. Ida P. Olds Dies in Michigan Mrs. Ida Olds, formerly of the McQueen Addition, died suddenly Monday in Ishpeming, Mich. She was the wife of Edward Olds.
Mrs. Olds attended schools in Ishpeming and and Mr. Olds were married there and came to Butte in 1929. The family made its home here until 1946 when Mr. Olds' duties took him to Philipsburg.
He retired in 1954 and since that time he and Mrs. Olds had done a lot of traveling, visiting in Butte and Philipsburg each autumn. They were enroute here when Mrs. Olds was stricken. Mrs.
Olds was a member of the Methodist Church and Pearl Chapter No. 14, OES, Philipsburg. In addition to her, husband, she is survived by sons and daughtersand Mr. and Mrs. Edward Olds in-law, Mr.
and, Mrs. Robert Olds Butte; son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James G. Simon of Great Falls; grandchildren, Rex, Holley, Jerry and James Olds of Butte and David Edward Simon of Great Falls; brothers-in-law and sisters, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Vidland of Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Tonkin of Phoenix and Mr. and Mrs.
Osmond Allen of Marquette, brothers-in-law and -in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Olds of Negaunee, Jack Olds, Mr. and Mrs. W.
J. Olds, H. Olds, Mr. and Mrs. William Billings Mr.
and Joseph Olds and Mrs. Polly Olds, all of Ishpeming, and several nephews, nieces and cousins. The body is being forwarded to White's Funeral Home. Imports Urged Restricted Oil WASHINGTON (P) Three senators Monday urged President Eisenhower to restrict oil imports to the 1954 ratio of domestic production, in the interest of national defense. Sens.
Carlson (R-Kan), Dirksen (R-Ill) and O'Mahoney (D-Wyo) reported after conferring with the President that he promised "serious consideration" of their appeal but made no commitment. Talking with newsmen, O'Mahoney and Carlson noted reports as to the size of Russia's submarine fleet. They said this country ought not to be too dependent on oil supplies subject to such a threat. The senators said Eisenhower has authority to limit imports der provisions of the reciprocal trade agreement act. They suggested that imports be restricted to the domestic production ratio of 1954 when 656,000 barrels were brought into the United States daily.
Just before Egypt seized the Suez Canal, the senators said, imports totaled 1,043,000 barrels daily. That dropped to 81,000 barrels daily after Egypt took over the canal. Last month, they added imports mounted to 1,900,000 barrels a day. They estimated the total will be about 1,175,000 barrels. NEWS CONFERENCE SET WASHINGTON (P) President Eisenhower will hold a news conference Wednesday morning.
Classic Rebellion Butte Briefs Parents of a son born Monday in Community Memorial Hospital are Mr. and Mrs. Forrest E. Hoss, 2240 East Drive. Mr.
and Mrs. Teodolo Valencia, 517 E. Mercury, Monday became parents of a son in St. James Hospital. A daughter was born in St.
James Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Warren Dor ville, 2000 California. Pvt. Charles J.
Gouin, son of Mrs. Fern A. Allen, 1900 Roberts, recently was graduated from a 12- week guided missile installation electrical equipment repair, course at the Engineer School, Belvoir, Va. was a student at Montana State College before entering the Army last December. Marriage licenses were issued Monday from the office of Frank Gabse, clerk of the District Court, to Charles R.
Holland and Peggy Joyce Parks, both of legal age, both of Whitehall; James R. Berness, Deer Lodge, and Mary Mikelich, Butte, both of legal age. Si Swartz, operator of the Montana Barber Supply, is recovering in General Hospital at Calgary, following an emergency operation for appendicitis, Butte friends learned Monday. Mr. Swartz had gone to Canada to visit relatives when he was stricken.
His son, Paul, accompanied him on the trip. Hiawatha Council No. 4, Degree of Pocahontas, will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the I00F Hall, 58 W. Broadway. Queenie Sullivan, Pocahontas, will preside.
A pot luck lunch will follow the business session. Jack M. Dollan of Missoula was a Monday visitor here. C. Wyman Taylor came here from Bozeman Monday.
James Williams, Helena, registered Monday in the Grand Hotel. S. E. Loeffler and D. D.
Casey of Livingston were in the city Monday. Here from Harlowton Monday were Mrs. J. and Linda Christiansen. Geraldine G.
Fenn, Bozeman, was a Monday visitor in the Mining City. A Monday arrival here was Don H. Ross, Missoula. Jack Carroll, Dillon, came here Monday. In Butte from Helena Monday was Harold J.
Wing. Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Tucker and Linda of Bozeman were Monday guests in the Leggat Hotel. Wisdom residents visiting here Monday included Ray Hinso. Lester Hansen, Helena, arrived in the Mining City Monday for a brief stopover. A Helenan coming here was Douglas Briggs. Ex-Diplomat Declares U.S.
Committing 'Suicide' With Aid WASHINGTON -A former diplomat Congress Monday United States is "going broke committing suicide" through its foreign aid programs. W. Sprulle Braden, former ambassador to Argentina and former assistant secretary of State for International Affairs, said the programs had won few friends and actually made some enemies. He Foreign testified Affairs before Committee the as House ego continued hearings on President Eisenhower's proposed 000 foreign aid program. Both the Republican and Democratie leadership in the Senate, meanwhile, renewed their predictions that the Congress would wihttle down the foreign aid program which had been out voluntarily by the President.
'Wild West' Bandits Rob Burmese Train RANGOON, Burma (P) Bandits staged a Wild West style train holdup 10 miles from Rangoon Monday. They stripped every passenger of money and jewels and escaped into nearby rice paddy fields. The train was on a journey north when three men climbed over the tender and at rifle-point ordered the crew to halt the train while eight companions went through the car for the loot. Cuban Oil HAVANA, Cuba (P -Cuba's infant industry is going ahead rapidly, but it still looks like a long time before the country can produce enough to satisfy domestic demands. The 1956 production was 40 per cent above that of 1955.
But the output of 540,000 barrels last year was just enough to meet nine days of Cuba's domestic consumption. Ten million dollars were spent on oil exploration in 1956, compared with $7,500,000 in the preceding year. Cuban and American companies are leading the search for oil. STOP THIEF! PROVINCETOWN, Mass. (U.P.) Mrs.
Julia McLean was walking along a street when a big Airdale grabbed her handbag and ran away. The bag was found not far from the scene, but a wallet and a change purse were misisng. They were later found in the yard of the dog's owner, with the contents intact. Boss Fails to Throw New Light on Current World Problems By. JAMES 'MARLOW WASHINGTON (P) Nikita Khruschchev, the Russian Communist party boss, has never been invited to this country but he wound up in millions of American homes, spreading Russian propaganda.
He did a good job for himself and Russia Sunday when CBS, which had filmed an interview with him in the Kremlin, presented him for an hour on its "Face The Nation" television show. He was self-assured, relaxed, quick, and good-tempered. He gave the appearance of a man oozing good will. To a lot of people he may have seemed reasonable and convincing. Actually, he said nothing new.
This was the chance, and he was smart enough to take it, to repeat face-to-face with millions of Americans the well known Kremlin position on a number of issues which separate the United States and Russia. The technique which he used Sunday and has used before is to make sweeping statements, and to appear to make sweeping concessions, which may sound warm and plausible to people who mo forget about details. For example: He represented Russia as all for disarmament and getting rid of nuclear weapons. But the fact is the United States has been making such proposals for 11 years. The stumbling block between the two countries has been on ing to some foolproof inspection system which could prevent cheating by either side.
Right there the details are enormous. It was Khrushchev who first belittle President Eisenhower's proposal for aerial inspection. He littled it again Sunday as a kind of "Peeping Tom" system but suggested, as this country has, that perhaps a first small step might be made. He made it appear that it was the United States, not Russia, which threw up an Iron Curtain between East and West. But Khrushchev was at his unconvincing worst on the subject of war and satellites.
He argued with a straight face that if the Russian armies were withdrawn from the satellites, particularly Hungary, the people of those countries would insist on retaining communism. He wasn't asked, perhaps because time was running out, how he could pretend the satellite people would willingly embrace munism after the bloody revolt in Hungary and the peaceful re volt in Poland. Although Khrushchev deplored any future nuclear war as a calamity for mankind, he nevertheless quite confidently predicted that in such a war capitalism perish and communism would survive. He may have seemed to be saying something new- but wasn'ton the subject of Red China. always insisted The Russian communists, have said again Sunday, that there is no conflict between their Communist party and the masses of the Russian people.
This convenient reasoning enables the Russian Reds, no matter what hardships they inflict on the Russian people, to argue that they are not doing it, that it is the Russian people doing it to themselves. But the Russians apparently are too afraid of the Russian people to depend on reason rather than power. Recently the Chinese Communists frankly admitted there can be conflicts between their party the masses of the Chinese and that the conflicts should be eliminated by persuasion instead of force. Khrushchev tried to shrug, off that Chinese stand by saying Communist parties in different countries have to take different roads to socialism. That was an old one.
He said the same thing back in February 1956. new light on problems. He All in all, Khrushchev, threw no sounded like a Russian Communist party phonograph record. The reason he could answer SO fast was that he was giving stock answers. Mrs.
Nancy Joyce Stoner of Los Angeles, who set fire to her home in a classic rebellion against diaper washing, says "it just made things She briefly appeared in court on an arson charge and was given until June 10 to enter a plea. Afterwards she said, "I wouldn't recommend that any other woman do what I did. I don't know what's going to happen to me." Secret Data (Continued From Page One) mony of the witnesses. The Court of Appeals in Denver upheld the trial judge. "Both the trial court and the Court of Appeals erred," Brennan said, adding: "We hold that the petitioner (Jencks) was not required to lay a preliminary foundation of inconsistency, because.
a sufficient foundation was established by the testimony of (the witnesses) that their reports were of the events and acticities related in their testimony." Brennan said the crucial nature of the testimony to the government's case was "conspicuously apparent," adding: "The impeachment of that testimony was singularly important to the petitioner. The value of the reports for impeachment purposes was highlighted by the admissions of both witnesses that they could not remember what reports were oral. and what written, and by (Harvey) Matusow's admission: 'I don't recall what I put in my reports two or three years ago, written or oral. I don't know what they Matusow has admitted giving false testimony in a number of cases. Brennan's opinion specifically disapproved what he called the practice of producing government documents to the trial judge for his determination of relevancy and materiality, without hearing the accused.
after inspection of the reportonly, the accused must the trial judge determine admissibility" Brennan said. In his dissenting opinion Clark said the court had fashioned a new rule of evidence "foreign to our federal jurisprudence." Angels Camp Is Back to Normal ANGELS CAMP, Calif. (P) After the noisiest weekend this tiny mother lode town has seen since the gold rush, Angels Camp was quiet Monday. The bark of some 4,000 motorcycles was gone. Three cyclists were dead as the result of accidents, 23 others were in a hospital and 26 had been jailed overnight, mostly for drunkenness and disturbing the peace.
The town itself was undamaged partly because local police called in some 50 peace officers from the California Highway Patrol and the Calaveras county sheriff's office. Trouble started when cyclists on a "gypsy tour" poured in from Nevada, Oregon, Washington and California for the American Motorcycle Assn. races. Police Chief Joe Spinelli blamed around cyclists who are not members the AMA and praised 300, the association for its help in regaining a degree of quiet. The 300, he said, staged drag races up the narrow main street and littered the town with beer cans and bottles.
For two hours before police help arrived it wasn't safe to cross the street. "Some of these fellows started using the main street for drag races. That's when we called for he said. Commerce Money Bill Is Approved WASHINGTON (U.P.) Congress gave final approval Monday to compromise $597,790,225 Commerce Department money bill which had been slashed about 35 per cent below President Eisenhower's original requests. The Senate approved the measlure and sent it to the White House by a unanimous 67-to-0 vote a few hours after the House had passed the bill by voice vote.
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