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Show oast Stockton Whips Edgehill For Junior M Crown; Logan 18th Places Fourth SAN FRANCISCO IP Friday, apparently caused a three alarm apartment house fne. Scantily clad tenants of the three story building fled to the street while firemen extinguished the blaze. Within a half an hour they were back in the frame structure, fearing only another jolt. The fiie was caused by a gas An- other strong temblor shook earthquake jittery San Francisco yesterday, adding to the vast toll of property damage, fires and frightened residents. The latest shock, which struck San Francisco at 12:13 am. PST and was the third strongest of the more than 50 which have rocked the Bay Area since FINAL ROUND RESULTS, tourney and those 32 came to. Stockton 48, Edgehill 33 Logan as the cream of 1332 quints which played the season m tho Downey 43, American fork 41 g LDS Churchs (consolation tiMe) league. 18th Pocatello 6th 44, Nephi 1st 42 Impressive award ceremonies followed the game between Slock-- ! I.ogan 18th 53, East Garland 47 5 Dnblan, Old Mexico ton and Edgehill. Dublin 73, Center 44 6 Downey, California Consolation honors in the meet' 7 Nephi 1st were won by Downey First of feated until Friday evening fought & East Garland last night until 9 Center Ward California, which edged Atneri- c&n Fork Fourth The latter Pocatellos Cantril Nielsen Jr. American Fork 4th 'wafted a d field goal to quint thus placed 10th. win for his ward. Nephi After a great stand, Two of tbe most popular md' Junior MIA the gamest teams of the week- - gained 7th in the final standings, the 1957 ran On Friday', Pocatello had been besketball tournament came to lnS jousting third-plac- e award. Poca- - downed by Stockton, and Nephi by YOL. 48, NO. 71 a colorful close last evening, for the with Stockton, Calif., beingW'l 6th and Nephi 1st, unde- Edgehill. Cache Valleys top entry in the, crowned champion of them all. meet came in for some honors, Score of the final game was: too. Logan 18th downed East Stocketon 48, Edgehill 33. 3 to claim 4th spot Garland Those two teams had survived in the tournament. The Garland four torrid rounds of competition, boys settled for 8th. driving into the title battle with In the initial game of the final superb spirit and play. The vieround. Dublan of Old Mexico tors trophy was symbolic of sutook 5th bv defeating Center 4 premacy among 32 teams in the Ihe Dublan bovs, a strong finisher last year also, were as one of the smoo'hest teams in the meet. Centers' WASHINGTON (IB John L. McClellan placement was No. 9 THEY FINISHED Stockton, Calif. 2 Edgehill 2nd 3 Pocatello 6th HOW 1- far-flun- 45-4- 1. final-secon- 44-4- neck-and-ne- yptians- - 73-4- Cache Couple (D-Ar- si, s, V; miPee Hurt In Crash weeks collision two and one-ha- lf south of the Ulah-Jua- b County lirte. John Ersel Swainston, 63, prominent farmer in the Whitney area, and his wife of one day, LaVern S. Wallentine Swainston, 48, formerly of Logan, were both hospitalized with injuries received in the accident, which killed a old Sanpete County woman. The two had just been married Thursday in the Logan LDS Temple and were on their way to a honeymoon in St. George. they were going to visit his miles GUEST speaker for Logan high PTA meeting Wednesday, Captain C. W. Brady. Salt Lake Officer Will Address ar En-rou- te Logan High Group Traffic safety and juvenile delinquency is the topic which will be discussed at the next Logan AsHigh School Parent-Teachsociation meeting. Captain C. W. Swainston, Brady, of the Salt Lake County Sheriffs office, will be present fJack) son, John Jr., in Cedar City. When word of the accident reached Preston their Blaine Porter, and brother of the injured man, Charles Swainston, left immediately for Provo where the two injured persons were in son-in-la- the hospital. The Swainstons collided head-o- n with a car driven by Murel Ivory, 71, the. dead woman husband. Mrs. Swainston, who had been driving, was thrown from the car into the path of r. vehicle driven by Carol Haugen, Cabour, S. D. She was dragged 130 feet and a wheel of the Haugen car passed over her body. i East Cache Stake In Session Today East tth' 1Cf acflvitTes Durfee of Aurora Ward the Eras recognition in the letter writing contest, on the sub-ject What the church athletic proeram means to me. Clark M. Stohl of the General YMMI A board made this presentation. Pictures of the championship Stockton team, and of nmnerupu stake quarterly conference sessions continue today with the morning starting time being 9:30 oclock, and the afternoon, 2 p.m with the evening program at 7:30. Dr. Adam S. Bennion, member of the LDS Council of Twelve, is representing the general authorities at conference. He is a educator, business leader and civic figure. President Cecil B. Kenner invited all families of the stake to attend todays sessions in Logan tabernacle. Music will be furnished by Relief society Singing Mothers of the stake. Tonights program, open to the general public, will feature Dr. Reed Broadbent as speaker. Cache well-kno- er to lead the discussion. The program is set for Wednesday,! March 27, at 8 p.m in Nibley Hall, according to Mrs. Marjorie Cummings, president of the group. Mrs. Larry Cole, program chairman, said that musical numbers will also be presented by the Logan High Glee club, directed by Eugene Tueller. Captain t. W. Brady has been with the Salt Lake County Sheriffs office for 10 years and has graduated from the Northwestern University Traffic Institute in Evanston, Illinois. He has also completed special courses at both Utah State University and the University of Utah. A former Chief of Traffic of the Sheriff's office, Captain Brady is becoming well known for his programs on traffic and juvenile delinquency. He has also served in the armed forces for four and one-hayears and is now, among other positions, officer in charge of driver education for the Salt Lake County Sheriffs office. lf Nixon Is Tired WASHINGTON W Vice presi- lent Pichard M. Nixon was admitted to Walter Reed Army Hospital Friday night suffering from influenza but was permitted to leave today long enough to attend two official functions. Nixon, tired and ill after his three-v.ee- k African trip, was running a temperature of 102 when he entered the hospital. today, ,r,r Judged the mast valuable aid , a three-month- old boy barely missed death when his grandmother wheeled him from in front of the fireplace in the family home. Five minutes later it collapsed. In all, some 31 persons have been treated for minor injuries. Mn aeulouslv, there were no serious injuries or deaths Most seuous was a woman with the fi actured foot. - Her-- J s22 K 'rK, no evl- from union funds with dence of a loan or of a gift Committee Counsel Robert F. Kennedy added that the invest!- Rations can show this whether ,urns over his Pelsonal ; nancial records or not. Beck, summoned to appear his records next Tuesday, ha.1 said he borrowed and repaid some 300,000 to 400,000 of union td,. McClellan j Egynt yesterday was reported would pledge in writing to set my users association such ast aside a certain percentage of has been formed by 14 Western the governments. shipping tolls to develop canal. But the sources said Instead, an association of inter- Egypt would insist on full au- esled pi lvate parties whose firms thority over canal operation, use th canal could form a coim and would not agree to share con- mittee to consult with the Fgjp-lia- n . . . teJway told trol of funds for canal developso Ca Suez Canal authority on 'rces, ln ment. canal development plans, the LnW"M V u The reported plan ruled out souices said. vJwr t Da2 xaUons Gener j j J rank-and-fi- le LEADERS DISCUSS n; Anglo-Americ- lUoo rr Moh-mou- well-guard- an Sea Search Fails Find Victims To their final stamp of approval on their communique late last night after a farewell dinner party at Of n Club. the The two chief executives conTOKYO OR The largest Far ferred for about two hours, while East air-se- a search since the met eVideCe secretaries their foreign Ia Cache Valley Inin d Korean War 70,000 out rift the roses with a deeper color and separately to hammer communi-miles of the Pacific yesterday i Esther, Kennedy said Becks more fragrance than on the west language of the final but reported no success ln its So ,uied WaIter Wuth. Rue. Questionable use of the S2i0,-- ! Coast luint for missing C97 with 67 no means the end of was The ReOR expected communique Senate WASHINGTON ho j rkh aboardAmecicang n The committee he,schedu,ed t0 nurseryman, to the picture the shaky repair , ak at . public William F. Know:-- 1 Planes and ships investigated cer-- l in the wake of the publican leader relations said, bas information on even-tai- n garden meeting Wednesday land said the administration must report after report of objects other transactions between ing March 27 at 8 oclock in the Suez Conference. House the teamsters White and companies James put its house in order for a whkh mi8ht be connected with Spokesman ,5 'tabernacie. the missing plane. All turned out which Bqpk controls. the earlier said descrip- general tax reduction next year. Thif js tbe fourtb meeting in a Hagertv negative.' series being sponsored by the j tion of a gratifying measure including lower personal and cor UUH rl 11 JOnnSOIl Air Dfl'v on conference deliCache County Extension Service agreement taxes and reduced porale income her Mld jr r,cue hfcadquarter, confor stood the beration still Garden and the Cache Valley excise levies. it was doubtful the four- privately as whole. a ference orClub, and its affiliated garden He told reporters he thinks the engined Stratocruiser was able to Asked whether the conference ganizations. bill scheduled for Senate ac- - j jand on the storm-tossetax waters stated has been generally satisfac- tion next week will be the By popular request. Alfred SALT LAKE CITY 6R lastFridav without smashing t bits Mrs. .41 Larsen, Garden Club tory, Ilagerty replied, Yes. F. Hunt, 64, Albuquerque, N. M., and killing all on board, British sources said earlier one by which Congress will vote we are again preof taxes im-- j was indicted here by the U.S. President, an extension outr'ht however, they an-Officially, how over best senting Mr. Wuthrich as a speak- that disagreement War- Korean Grand Jury on charges of bilking er that ,he the search will go du,in8 jounced 'P'ed So m tw r r e to defend western Europe against That measure would extend the n unli every scrap of informa-presethree Utah men of 10.000 in fic- asked thatserjes he be given an op- - Communism may have caused a oil and gas frauds. titious to further discuss roses delay in issuing the joint statecorporate income tax rate Hn has been checked out. The indictment listed Dr. Char-th- portunity Weary crews kept their plane even: 52 of chiefs of state. two ment the entire Wednesday per cent and retain Korean by the les A. Munns. a Brigham City The highly secret defense talks War excise rates on beer, liquor, in ihe air until lack of fuel drove jng program will be devoted to dentist. Dr. E. B. Harrison, a rose culture. centered around Britain's hopes cigarettes, automobiles and a them back to their bases. Long at Brigham City . optometrist and tells us that to withdraw a substantial amount number of other products. It has lines of voluuteers formed as over to C. Larson, a Salt Lake City spite our cold winters, roses will of troops from act bass cothe JP been and passed by already Germany scanners for the search craft. investor as those bilked by Hunt grow good here If they are pro- ordinate more closely its nuclear House. A total of 66 planes from AlasThe indictment lists six soecl-fi- c perly cared for. There are apmissiles weapons and guided charges of fraud against Hunt proximately 120 varieties that program with the United States. ka, Hawaii, Guam, Okinawa, KoHe is being held in Salt Lake will grow for us in Cache Valley. rea and Japan took part in tha County jail awaiting arraignment. Mrs. Larsen urged all interestgiant operation along with a fleet of surface vessel. ed in gardens to be present WedSALT LAKE CITY OR A Brignesday to hear Mr. Wuthrich disham Young University professor KIDDIES cuss the recommended varieties, told the Utah Canners Assn, their planting, pruning and care. Bill fail this year than in 1956 Through the Extension Service ROOSENDAAL, Holland OR William F. Edwards, vice presi-dethis information is being mimeo-grphe- d Quintuplets wre born prema-and dean of the BYU Col- and will be distributed here to a babied ee of Commerce, addressed the thi at the Wednesday meeting as turely of but ail well as a booklet on rose culture. associations 45th annual con- Gov. SALT LAKE CITY (IB died within six hours A feature of the evening will vention D. Clyde signed into law two bo George The three and quints, r film Rosorama be a However, he said business with bills imposing a state incoma were born to Mrs. Cornelia ood management would survive prepared by the American Rose girls, Ilassel-Hevnewithholding lax on The mother ;u,' van conditions!r X' this and allowing Brigham .Young Unl- Society. It features propagation in good con- - ,0l8her busm5 be was to reported and care of roses, shows new versity the power of eminent doaward winning varieties and dition main. Cathfirst The born, baptized scenes from outstanding rose The eminent domain measure 1 I erina, was the last to die. She also allows such power to 'all lGOT , COO lived five hours and 45 minute. other educational institutions of The other four babies died withweather is forecast for today in collegiate grade in the state in two hours after birth. Still Also among legislative bills The quintuplets were born af- - Cache Valley following a similar, ter a pregnancy of six months, brand that came yesterday on signed by Clyde was one to trans-The- ir Bills total weight was Under one the heels of storms. Minimum fer some 412 000 from the (2 2 pounds!. temperatures went to 13 degrees ers hospital fund to University of of it Mrs. Van Ilassel-IIeyne- n gave early yesterday, and today' high Utah to help build a wing His proposed medical center. birth to twin bovs two years ago. sill be around 45. Senator Sees Mid-Ocea- Transport Crash Lower Taxes In '58 - Ta Hovey said, - President EisenTUSKERS TOWN, Bermuda 1b hower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan yesplans for terday discussed highly secret common defense against any Rushan attack. The two leaders, who are winding up four days of talks here, planned to'issue a formal communique on their discussions today. The President and MacMillan were expected to pnt Ul III m. before members of thq Cache Valley chapter, Utah Historical Society. Merlin R. Hovey, president of the historical society group, said Dr. Jennings has done much excavating in Utah and surrounding states and that he has written widely on the subject of anthropology. He is editor of the Journal. ' Slides of sites where he has excavated for ruins of early man in the Great Basin will include many taken during Dr. Jennings many summer expositions, Mr. canal. Hammarskjold met first with d Egyptian Foreign Minister Fawzi before meeting Nasser for a negotiating session that could mean peace or war in the Middle East. Hammarskjold was counting os his methods of secret diplomacy to accomplish what years of bloodshed and public debate have failed to do lay the cornerstone for friendship between Israel and its Arab neighbors. The ipi chief and the Egyptian ruler planned to talk all day-ri- ght through lunch in the house privacy of a outside Cairo overlooking the Nile River. Common Defense Against Attack ts j In addition, Egpt would be willing to let any disputes on Suez development be submitted to arbitration by experts but not by government or political bodies like the U.N. It was indicated strongly however that Egypt would continue to bar Israeli ships from the j ,rS7o, today play- p. - to have proposed a Suer Canal P)n calling for a Users Asso-wo- n elation of private shipping and oil companies to help p an the development of the disputed wa- - commented on Beck tions on NUe River is. finances at a news conference jand er in the tournament was Barke-le- y in which he reported receipt of a Disclosure of the plan came as Lunt of Dublan, Mexico, who number of com-- 1 the Egyptian Suez Canal authori-plainwon a similar award last year. alleging mismanagement y announced that ships as big The team, cho- and misuse of union funds. as 2 500 tons could use the va-H- e sen by officials, includes: Bill said he has ordered the lifervv?y, as of Sunday. The pre- Eart, Edgehill; Dallas Person, gal staff to begin a study of leg- vious top limit was 2,000 tons, East Garland: Cantril Nielsen. islatjon needed or desirable to- The canal is scheduled to be Pocatello; Dee Lambert, Stock-to- prevent dissipation, misappro- cleared for all shipping in about Noel Stoker, Logan 18th; priation. or any improper use of three weeks, Doug Lawson, Center; Joel Sper- union funds. The proposal, as reported by ry, Nephi 1st: Sherman Gay, DraA committee accountant tcstl-- j the Cairo sources, appeared to per Third: Bill Crow, Downey: .field at committee hearings Frl- - fail far short of the international Dick Gehrke, MiUcreek, and day that Beck repaid some 270,-- 1 guarantees demanded by the Berkeley Lunt, Dublan. 000 of the $300,000 to $400,000 he major Western canal users, said he' borrowed when federal U.ider the reported plan, Egypt tax 'agents were on his trail in 1954. The accountant. Carmine S. Bellino. said there was no record I of the loans in union books. McClellan declined under questioning, to say just bow' Beck transaction with the union should be described. We know that Beck took from the treasury some 270.000, he page. TEN CENTS sAnoth j Don Valley man and woman were in fairly good condition at the Utah Valley Hospital in Provo Saturday night after being injured Friday in a three-ca- r A Cache S. ; dinlnUnr6 In Daly City LOGAN, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1957 47-5- Critically Bverly pointed out that the aftershocks were coming wi'h less fipquency than they did Fnday and probably will continue to taper off An accmate figure on piobably will take weeks to determine. Mavor Geoige Chnstopher has called an emeigcncv meeting to assess the damage to the city. Til Herald Journal j five-nig- ht line broken during the quake six minutes eailier. Damage was expected to run Into the millions from the 60 minor and more serious shocks. Dr. Perry Bverly. head of the Lmversity of California seismology laboratory lq Berkeley reported eight distinct shocks yesterday. Onlv two of the eight reached a magnitude of 3. Anglo-America- criss-crosse- - j Indicted On Charges Of Fraud d I., . ' nt at Dairy Objective SOUTH LYON, Mich. OR Dairv farmer groups from New England to Utah will meet in Chicago the first week of April to map planes for forcing a national dairv farmers referendum on a minimum price for milk. ar Some Failures Holland Quints YOUNG COUPLE AND THEIR CLUSTER OF Die After Birth Clyde Signs On Income Tax nt 1 half-hou- Clyde Fifteen Awaiting Has Pen I Got1. SALT LAKE CITY George D. Clyde stdl had 15 bills to act upon before the deadline OR Tuesday midnight. The 15 unsigned measures included two bills involving gasoline taxes. The two bills, one carrying a rate of six cents a gallon and the other carrying the present rate of five cent per gallon, Cali- PASADENA, Calif. OR conflict with one another and fi- nal action by the governor is forma must live with the con-- I pending study by the attorney stant 'possibility of a serious earthquake general's office,' Dr. Charles F. Richter, world Senate bill which provide for a renowned seismologist and expert on lecuiring upheavals of the refund for fuel used for way agricultural purposes and a 'earths ciust, said this was the House bill which increases the scientific view of temblots such as the one that rocked San tax. In addition the governor still Francisco with a magnitude of has the responsibility of appoint 5.5 on the Richter scale of 10. He said the tremor appeared ing members of three new boards the road board, the parks to be along the famed San Andreas Fault, but was pretty hard board and the land board. Each board will have five mem- to pinpoint in early reports. The bers serving in an advisory cap- fault is a major fracture running virtually the length of California acity and a full time director. off-hig- TWO SETS OF TWIN daughters within 17 months have come into the home of Mr and Mrs. Tad D. Hendricks, North Logan. Here the outstanding young family is shown in their living room when Julie and Jan (the babies! were one week old. Kaje and Kathy are 17 months of age, and already loe to Babies when seeing their little sisters. Mrs. Hendricks is the former Maxine Lee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Lee. Hyde Park. Tad, who Is a senior at Utah State University majoring in animat husbandry, is a son of President and Mrs. David O. Hendricks, of Lewiston, call . ' In the earthquakes of 1906 and and has been the cause of periodic . shakes, amrfhg them the disas- - 1940 the elastic rebound, the sling trous shakes of 1857 and 1906. produced by this steady shift, Dr. Richter, busily answering wa a little moie than 15 feet; so telephone calls from colleagues that since 1857 theie has been Institute of enough time for a strain on the at the California Technology, said he summed up same part of the fault to add up the state s situation on the basis to almost enough for a great 'of a geodetic survey in 1948 indi- - earthquake. Dr. Richter emphasized that eating the average horizontal shift his view of the facts was not a in this aiea. going The amount of shift is com- prediction nor the reflection of a quite childish calculation by monly stated as two inches a 1857 year; really it is a little less, some persons that since the close to 15 feet in a hundred and 1906 snakes were 49 years vears, he reported m a state-- 1 apart, anotner was about due pient which he said had applica-- 1 simply by adding that many tion to the present. Ijears. j j ) j |