OCR Text |
Show : ' . ' V- ii t. i' "'!'' '' - '1 .1 . ' ' (c One' mp Iydo 'WfOrkers United Press International The numNEW YORK (UPI) to the due ber pf unemployed Taft-Hartle- . W-d- ive -- ooa. at figure- includes the 503,000 ing steel workers whose walkthouout bn July 15 has thrown sands of other workers' in allied; indu tries out of Work A United;; Press International i feuirvey shows that the crisis serious. more steadily becoming - mctal-oikin- g - . thit predicted , - Tern iveekI as-semb- ly !; - editor-in-chie- f Campbell, of Iron Age, the national , : One-authoritat- TT resents a rise ay steel strike continued to mount today. estimate s.. th'atrby he end of the week the total may exceed 750, " has' " y i j; the number of men idled will run from 50.000 to 800,000 by the end ' WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 21, Utah County. UUh L cials alsd had hoped it would pro- duce endugh tax revenue to keep the ederal budget in the black. Injuredjn Bicycle; Crash I Janny Jennings, 11, 325 v void."- ne j - 99-da- mm .... "4- i ? . j " g j Former Urahn Accused of Td x Evasion California 'DETROIT man himself as former former Deer Hunter ibusinessman federal authorities here - today tax Crash Victim charges j -- A (UPI) des-- j a eribing Washington lobbyist and a in Utah- held by on . is - i r V L':';'', being evasion. Arch T. Bray, 69, was arrest ed Monday .upon release from federaj prison in Milan after sentence for .serving a violation of probation in connection .with a bad check case. Bray is accused of ducking '$76,500 in income tax from 1954 t n r o u g h. 1956.' An indictment against' Braj 'and his wife,- - Dorothy, was "recently returned by a Salt Lake City federal grand . th BEAVER A California (UPI) deer hunter, Edward Everett ' Paine, 68, of El Monte. was killed Tuesday when his pickup truck rolled over on U.S. High- way 91 about nine ot Beaver. miles . south - State Patrolman William Birch said Paine died of internal injuries suffered in- th4 mishap. Birch said the driver lost control of the vehicle when its right rear ; tire blew. out. jury.. A passenger, Richard O. Bi ay said he would fight rePigg, moval to Utah for trial on the 5 Whittier, Calif., escaped unharmed. charges. -- - . ...... He was held in the Wayne to raise County Jail after Jailing ' lice Flies Ho Georgia For cation (Continued; from Page One) up The White House issued ... Mae West M. , Freeman. Loses Fight Published Herald by SAN FRANCISCO Cor- West' 190 FourtH. poration, North Street, every afternoon, ' no Au-gust- a National. Golf CI ib, one of y his favorite resorts. The club does not liegin it's season until the middle of' November, but the White (House sent word Tuesday to. have Eisenhower's cottage nor-mall- 1879. Jami-s- C. Hag-ert- y said "no serious health jea-sonwere behind thi ' hurriedly arranged trip. He saidj the President learned early Tukday afternoon that the week-en- d outlook in was for wapm, sunny Augusta weather aind he decided, to ' take j advantage: of it. fiom traces oi a cold," 'Apart Hagerty said,' "he is in excellent ' " ; The White House doctor, Maj. Gen. Howard McC. Snyder, arid Hagerty were flying south with Eisenhower, but Mrs. Eisenhoweralso recovering frm a cold, decided to remain at the White ' House. j "Subscription terms by car-ti-n n Utah County: Per month $1.60 months advance $9.60' - :One year in advance By $19.20 mail anywhere in the inited Sates or its posses sions; $1.60 per month: $9.60 for , six months in advance; $19.20 for a year in advance. Herald telephone Lumbers: For editorial circulation! advertising and sports 1 FR for society and nfu briefs, call FR fe . call . Whatever your needs in I planting, see Provo Land- scape Company . . . first! jt Phone FR I 1455 So. Springville Road I 23 In S urplus needed supplies fo the northeast and counter an upswing in raw sugar prices,. o linion to The revised 1059 quota the Grange Number ,1648 ficially' declared that eight crops of amount off foreign; and domestic are in surplus. Shelby, Ohio, arid third prize $3,000 to Converse Grange Num sugar whiqh can be marketed iin The eight crops are cotton, 1528 of Converse, Tex. her the nation Iduring the year is staple cotton, rice, peatons". . nuts, tobacco, corn, rye, and tuns Sugar quotas were increased by nuts. PHOENIX, (UPI) Under 100,000 tons Sept. 3 and importer of The department said at the secretary Agriculture Trje were authorized Sept. 28 to imsame time that honey and crude Mpre warned today that a nev above quoport and refine pine gum were hot considered to rural America is developing i; tas. The over-quot- a sugar was to sugar be in surplus, mearihig the sup- iwhich farming no longer is th in be held bond under inventory port limitation would not apply major source of income. 1. until Jan. to these, products. In the1 new commuitiities. Mors The department said that disThe department had announced raid, business ajid industry pro tribution has continued high since earlier its decision to apply1 the vid as' much money as agricu' then,' however, and the price Of support ceiling to I960 production ture. raw sugar continued to ris? of wheat,; barley, sand grain sorMorse! told an area developmen reaching 6.57 cents per pound Oct. ghums. No decision has been workshop sponsored by the Edisoii 15. . amade. yet . on oats, flaxseed, soy Electric Institute that the futuri beans, cottonweed, and dry edible Of j rural 'areas depended oni 'thJ beans ability of local leaders to plan for the future and take adva i Presi- tage of opportunities for growth WASHINGTON (UPI) THE VERDICT dent Eisenhower is considering a Valid, rilled the court, upholdmove to authorize an increase in Th WASHINGTON UPI) ing the widov's claim in full. The cheese imports. Agriculture Department has in judge said that, although court The President has, ordered the creased the 1959 U. S. s.uga Tariff Commission to .study the marketing quota by 100,000 ton approval may be desirable for recheese situation to-- determine if in a move designea to assur a name change, it is not no is quired. "As tlpng as there additional imports, mostly from fraudulent intent," said the judge,; Holland 9nd Italy, can be per- SOFT SOAPED "'a person may change, his name with mitted witout interfering An Ohio CHICAGO fac , (UPI) just by "getting rimself known the American price support pro-its employe; by a new one." "soft soaped" tory gram. into cutting down accidents. Th( (State laws Vary). ' th Council National said Safety Th (Copyright 1959, General WASHINGTON (UPI) o out Features-Corp.bars free Agriculture Department estimat- factoryto passed . all employes with th .if-ed, today that pork production un soap your safety record slogan "Keep week der federal , inspection ;last rose to 201,200,000, the. largest for clean." . ny week since Febiruary. The department also reported - . Readers Court ARMY (UPlf The Ar-- r my has issued a call for 9,000 draftees .in December,! the same number ' as in Octobeif and November. It said ' all will be allowed to spend Christmas at home. ' l West, 66, suffered another setback .I i Tuesday in her fight to, gain sole singer Marie- Lind for billing her-se- li as "'Diamond Lil." She conrights to perform under the name "Diamond Lil." tended that inasmuch as she Th entertainer cheyed gum wrote and starred in a play by impassively as she heafd the de thai name, shev should have excision the, court fof Judge; clusive rights to perform as "diaThomas Foley. She jater told' mond Lil." She also aiked $50,000 newsmeri she would pursue her' damages, claims in a higher court. In denying Miss West a tern porary injunction, Foley" ruled f h - ' &JLight,Co. How many extra jviUmiiis do you need per day? Carf a food supplement make men more virile, women more re- ceptive? This article in No vember Reader's Digest not only answers those questions but also gives you the official ama eixart agamsc wnicn you vou vuetii, nay uranu and subsidiar- es have invested $159.2 million in the to years lceep the electrical service in this area dependable, j plenti- past Think" 1 Local (UPI) WASHINGTON in Ohio and Montana, granges Texas have won top (prizes'- in th-- ..j W. W. $1,058,776, Clyde Co., Springville, for 3.3 miles of Interstate Highway 80 '5orth from Stoddard to Morganj. Brimhall - Joh4son, Murray, of six $137,709, for construction miles on Utah Highway, 277 in the Mt. Pleasant-rfalrvie.area. w Start On . Stay On . . 2 KUTV-G- H. TONIGHT 6:00 TV HOUR OF STARS Men Against Speed Farley Granger Moni Fteeman A car race reaches gripping climax in Ge many. 7:00 WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIGHTS Luiz Rodnqoez vs. Isaac Log art SPORTS KEVS 8:00 from 417 Jll82 ) FARLEY GRANGER (( 'MAN AGAINST 6:00 F.M MONA FREEMAN ) ) ) SPEED' PpmLOpESDGr : ( P M . .ij m ess and C7 OVERLEAF- ",- & HAWAIIAN EYE An Amnesiac's threats cause a life or death race. i, . Service State Oreir AC N '. I ': . . . J JACK NAN KELLY LESLIE MtlUHMi' I ) v RAIGIIT BOURn0,i WHISKEY Ij j. .,t . ta I - I wn-- w. (( PRESENTED BY HOUSEHOLD FINANCE 1 . and STANDARD OPTICAL '''! ) iUf i y i - -- V .; ' JAck Kelly A man janswers a i hearts i meets iff Y If V3L!ltj 11:00 mm ii 'KYA.f o ir i i i v THE LIGHTER BOURBON STRAIGHT BOURBON. WHISKEY 90.4 PROOF ' . - St, i lonely column and i a mg , surprise ' - NEWS 1 )) )) ... TV HOUR OF STARS , 0RDER BRIDE' MV' - (3 Bride' tmrtltC- - j 10:00 P.M. , u . . 'Mail Order 69' - ' . '' 9:00 MAN WITHOUT A GUN 10:00 BELMONT DISTILLING CO., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. ' ; ' ti TONIGHT on Ch. 2 Sec . . . )) )) (( I - OZZIE & HARRIET ck I (( South State,- Orem AC Todayor Sales Bullock X community service contest sponsored by the National Grange and Foundation. trie Sear-Roebu- 8:30 GARDENS WALLACE a FREE ESTIMATE Call Us - 10 ful and low in cost. from the Cudahy You TV HOUR OF STARS f overpasi to ... ? II St. 15 Highway Cheaper Than 1 Utah power ' () Lane. m for the month. Heavy pork supplies this fall nave - been keeping farmers' hog prices at low levels. that the name "Diamond Lin public domain, therefore available ' ti, anyone. ,Miss West had sued night dub Vitamin Racket' Beck Chain link Fence yi9 that slaughter of hogs' under federal inspection in September totaled 5,767,000 head, a new record j Tktri In by ths NORTH SALT LAKE (UPI) Mrs. Freda B. Wobd has resigned as North Sail Lake town clerk in, the face Of what she called "persistent pressure" after serving in the pst 10 years. She asked the towjn ) board that her resignation be effective Nov. l. , Mrs. Wood, who also, is a member of the town boa;rd, cited opposition to her holding two offices. She will continue as a tbwn board member and seek in November. In addition, Mrs.' Wood asked the town board to arrange for an audit of city books in November instead of waiting until next July. She also askedj that her department of responsibility be changed from finance to parks. R'E'S pi p3 j Are You Being ft Woman Resigns ' As Town Glerk - ISSUES CALL 'I , ) i '. Telephoto) I . , j ' 3 (HeraM-UP- Top prize of $18,000 went to D: ! WASHINGTON -vide Grange Number 142 of Di r. The (UPI) Agriculture Department today of- vide, Mont., second prize of $5,09' statement meeting. was The, President expected to Stay through Sunday at the - Monday through Friday Sunday jlleraid published Sunday . morning. Entered as . second class matter at tht post office in ' Provp Uah under the act of Mirch (UD Mae Detail. Tiago-Sdhmic- Farim News Roundup on either health.'--' i , Crops Declared Eigit "J WASHINGTON bail set by Judge Ralph Augusta, Ga., for some golf and sunshine, Right is James Rowley, head of the White House Secret Service President Eisenhower chats. with his pilot, Col. William Draper, center, as he prepares to take off from Washington Airport, Wednesday for IKE FLIES SOUTH 1 . S3 000 -- Interstate I4KE CITY (UPI) The Utah Highway Department opened bids Tuesday onj $2,752,626 worthy of rroad building"; projects. Low .bids ;yere $838,480 below engineers,' estimates. The projects involved and the low bids were: Co.j Salt Lake two miles of on $1,556,141, City, ( : -- NO ( ) ' s" . six-mon- ' - 1 of income -- De'?'- Virginia. waro and North Carolina have not been materially affected. Washington State Opens Highway Bids For $2,752,626 in Projects SALT ready. , Press Secretary , Arkan- Sutes such as Flprida, sas. onHhis page. j fact-findin- 1,213. j, iV YES; . k ficant. Massachusett;s, unemployed due to the strike was .put at For the actual' court decision, see verdict elsewhere i -- . 800 Other regions, however, have not' been hard hit. Iowa said th number of layoffs was not signi-- . j er Court was found lying, ihis with Ipps entangled in his. 'bike next to a tree at 641 North .1st West. Police rushed ' him to ;St. Mirks Hospital where he died a few minutes later. Investigators speculated he had come down a hill on his bicycle and hit either a small wall or a tree". The handlebar-- of the bike hit his skull above the right eye. A car of the Salt Lake .City animal control division first noticed boy lying under the cial boost. J tree.. on the whether differ Opinions Police. at first listed the, mishap aftermath will be its as a traffic accident but later strike and( Wi George Taylor, reclassified it as a bicycle ac inflationary. of the head presidential! cident panel which investigated the steel dispute has said shortages caused by the strike would tend to push prices up. But other experts believe the slowdown in' economic expansion may work in just the opposite way. spark plugs, laid off es "He did have another name years ago," conceded the widow, "but he'd! been using 'John Peterson' for almost ten years: Everybody knew him by that name, both in 1 personal and business life." "The fact remains," said the insurance company, "that he never did go to court to get the change approved. A person can't change his name legally without going through the regular icourt procedure." IS THE INSURANCE POLICY VALID? Weigh' both sides, then mark iyour. verdict: ' Shel-merdi- manu-iacur- ' f x. j October-lfovember-Decemb- Co.l which ' steel-usin- An , SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) was Lake old Salt boy llyear killed. Tuesday wher - his bike crashed into a tree or wall and a handlebar pierced' his skull. workers. (he Elec- By WILL BEUNARD When John Peterson died, his widow put in a6laim 'for his insurance! But the insurance company, after an investigation, turjieri her dowri: At a court hearing, the r company explained why: "John Peterson was not his legal name, Vour. Honor.-- '' When he used that name in his application form, he was making a false statement. Therefore, the policy1 is null and : Boy Fatally tric Auto-Lit- e Reader's Court j j .At Bay City, Mich., j of 95 million dollars predicted for the current year now is in grave danger, of turning into a deficit and unemployment is expected to remain above 3 million because y of the steel walkout.-- . Expected Improvement Earlier in the year government ' officials had expected fthat a sustained improvement in jthe economy in October, November and December combined with usual seasonal trends would drop unemployment in October' to below j three million. Labor Secretary JamesP. Mitchell was so confident of this last spring he offered to eat his hat publicly if it didn't occur. With 3,230,000 persons out :of work in g September and layoffs ;in industries mounting, Mitchell is being advised "to prepare j to devour his fedora. The economists, meanwhile, expect that the" boom will be stretched out. An earlier estimate of a 495 billion dollars annual output rate of goods 'and services in the three months has been abandoned 7 as1 out of reach. Officials Not Alarmed The government will report in a day or two that total output in July, August and Septe riper slid annual below the 484billion-dolla- r rate posted in the spring. Officials are not alarpied over the slide which was very small. Abnormally high steel output and stockpiling in the spring gave the national output rate an artifi- Birmingham, Ala. reported that in Birmingham and' Jefferson County the best estimated is that a total of 23,400 are out of work. . But, the narrow budget surplus - I d i - The (UPI) economic! boom anticipated for the last three, months of this year is out the window. Government officials blame the steel strike. The boom had been expected to whittle unemployment to the lowest level' in two years. Offi steel-relate- r Expected Economic Boom Now Out Of The Window WASHINGTON ply the ,steel mills With cOaL,1 Indiana's idle in steel-rclate- J industries was put a 17,900. i i s - hi': i j 1 Steel Strike Blamed By EDWARD COWAN nitcd Press International .' and Fisher Body plants and ths rest from various businesses. Louisville advised jthat 3,700 are expected to be idled jat the Gen eral Electric appliance part plait near Louisville by Oct. 30. In the Cleveland area 14,030 have been indirectly idled by the steel strike and he .number i, expected to be increased anotxier 10,000 in the next two, weeks. Ths Ohio Bureau of j Unemployment Compensation estimated that 20. 000 secondary industrial workers nave been laid off and that 80,000 seel workers are, unemployed in the" state. 250 jobless in' indusColorado reported about 9.DD0 tries as of last week. workers idle. Of tis 'number, it St. Louis reported a total of was stated, ' 8,500 are either, steel 6,500 laid off 4,500 iif phevrolet workers or coal miners who sup "The pace of layoffs probab ly will increase," he oredicted. Kansas City reported that 3,,CK)0 have been laid off in that area Of these 1,800 are in manufacturing,1 chiefly in fabricated metals. the California Bureau of' Employment said that ,1,200 persons have been direcly affected by the steel strike in Los Angeles. About 7.200 are directly affected byf trie strike at the Kaiser steel plant at Fontana. There has been scattered unemployment in the Saa , Francisco ar?a. The Minnesota Employment Security Department estimated DAILY HERALD 1959 Mearoog IT IK of 4,429 from the minors and 58,000 others (mostly auto workers) idled because of Vcek ending Oct. 9." ' In the Philadelphia area about the Strike. 20.000 have been idled, mostly, m . Shortages Force Layoffs industries that produce auto bodSteel shortages haVe also forced ies and parts and home, appli- layoifs at the Chevrolet assem ances. biy and Fisher Body plants at Latest Chicago area figures ,up Jarjesville, Wis., the Cevrolet to October 15 show 19,700 . unemplant, at, Alanta and Genployed in secondary industrie?. eral 'Motors' plants at Saginaw There have been 2,800- jobless in and Flint, Mich., adding 3.976 to the last two weeks and! of' these the growirig number ol idbd ' metal fabricating has contributed wo.rkers. v 1.800. Director A. Thomas Rose of the The Peoria Caterpillar Co. laid Visconsin employment service off 8,000 at its plant complex in said jl,05iri'6rkers lost their joos Peona, ti.J . anc .,5tK) eae.' at its because or" the steel strike in; plants at Joliet and Decatur.. ' "Steel" reports that hundreds of strike center stated: jlx aiiu una tilt y tciv nviiipi, v In 53.877 "Some Detroit vill Workers related the be that end 'layoffs are beginning to snow by reported plants, mctalworking forced to close over the next 30 industries 4re eligible tor unem o'f the month Michigan expects c ball." He reported that the totals days for lack of steel. ,S lutdowas. ployment compensation. This rep have 22,000 steel workers, o,300 idle in. the state is now 6U82. veni though the mitls'i not injunction reopen, uie weekly a ddep. flocks sent the 500,000' strikers back to irimany steel using plants ' are cooling-of- f now, low, the magazine feaid, and their jobs for an 80-dperiod; jihey xantto expert normal, ship-- ' 10 y Crisis To Worsen rnents from tiie mius ion "Tens of thousands of workers tla'ys after operations I arc r? in the metahyorking .industry are sumod. now on a reduced york keek W'.UPI survey brought these r because of the steel shortage," ports from ' corr e s p o it d e n t s Campbell told UPI. MTih4( num throu shout the co inlry bers will skyrocket ove the next Pennsylvania Hit Hard I II, iwo 'weeks Many steel consume;? Pittsburgh said the Pennsyl- vill be shut down tight before jvania Laboil and Industrv Depart- Thi iment sets the total m Pennsylthey get fresh supplies. it v , t i o ktrik; Uiahs i.Hc nieans the crisis will become fUr " 24.556. This number includes 166 worse after the mills st art up The authoritative m a jj a z i n e !GdO strikers The report from this eekfif in the meantime a win occur of the L. KILG ALLEN Bv JAMES n ' ni l Without Reservations John Wayne ; Claudette Colbert ' |