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Show 4 SUNDAY HERALD Utah County, Utah SUNDAY, JUNE 4, 1961 Former Provodn Dies In Arizona Thirty Men Comb Nearby Foothills I . ... Missma - I mm search fcnded As Orem Boy Found .1 . In Logan 1 What's Playing At The Movies i 'I .VV-.-.- I ' Party Girl. SPRINGVILLE Art City .The Facts of Life, nd Inherit The. Wind. 1 . , ' ' PAYSON . jj J Huishi The Big Show, with Cliff Robertson. ' -. SPANISH FORK Arch - All In A Night's Work, -i- , with Dean "Martin. PLEASANT. GROVE ''Grove! Closed. ; AMERICAN FORK One Hundred And One Coral 'j Dalmations. Starlite Sanctuary, and The Canadians. LEHI , Closed. Royal ; Main Paris (Continued from Page One) . lng that, each had the same objective in his own field. , . .The announced agreement be- tween the two leaders that it was Important for the West to stand . . move on pBerlin did not carry the two presidents made no attempt to , lay down any details of how this could be done. .'There was also no attempt to n differreconcile the ences between the two . coun. well-know- tries on how Communist aggres- infiltration should be blocked in Southeast Asia.i The American President apparently ;niade no attempt to deflect De Gaulle from the track he has chosen for France in relation to the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance, the French refusal to allow nuclear bombers on her soil or to integrate her forces into the NATO command. ; sion j and; : Avoid Many Subjects list of subjects the two leaders apparently avoided made it - clear that Kennedy was sizing up the man with whom he will have to deal and that De Gaulle was laying downl his own views on .various world problems, '. ' Mrs. Kennedy's part of the visit was a sensational success. The French people were allowed to find out the French always love a secret that in spite of her apparent determination . to buy 'American, clothes she wore some - The ' j ' 1 This, coupled, with the" fact that her forebearerswere French and that she was highly photogenic, ' made, her the .darling of the boulevards. ' . ,x (Continued from Page One) obstacle to a settlement assuring Laos oi neutrality outside the cold x has been the East-Wedispute over truce controls. Russia, supported by its Red aUiesVxhas rejected Western demands that ithe International Anothe. :'!,' block '. ' st ) Control Commission be (ICC) given' wider powers to check al- leged truce j violations throughout ' - Laos. ' ' - r Charles Powell, j a Murray, member of Brigham Young University Emeritus Club, (class of collapsed and died while walking to the Family Living Center on the BYU campus Friday evening, Although medical: aid was immediately available!, Mr. Powell died shortly after, He' had just attended a meeting of the Eme ritus Club and was on" his way to attend the dedication of a room honoring the j late John C. one granddaughter; her father, Swensen when he , collapsed, apEdgemont brothers and sisters, parently of a heart' attack. Mrs. Barlow (Maud) Pace,- Loa; Mrs. Kay (Fawn) Vest, American Fork'; Fred Davis, Provo; Orvil Davis, Lindon; Mack Davis, Heber; Mrs. Sheldon (Naomi) Warwood, Mrs. Charles (Leona) To Hatch and Mrs. John D. (Ruby) Stratton, all of Orem; Mrs. Allen k Ma xine) Keith, Provo. M-:- -: j Funeral services will be con2 the MEXICAN ducted Tuesday at p.m., in HAT, Utah (UPD ;Berg Drawing Room Chapel with Boating adventurer Wayne Wilson trip down Bishop Harold Colvin officiating. plans to start a Friends may call Tuesday prior the San Juan River !in this remote area of Southern Utah today in his i to services. x Burial will be in the Provo City "bubble boat." at! Wilson Mexican Hat arrived Cemetery. went over and final deSaturday tails for the trip with veteran river runner Gaylord StaVely. (Continued from Page: One) The engineer from York, Pa., invented the Castro sympathizers land added craft which is propelled by f ogt the opposition political party here4 was too small and weak to make pedals . and is steered by merely Bv United Press International any attempts against jhis regime Mid - may prices received by changing his walking direction. The Predicts Capture Utah farmers and ranchers were boat resembles a plastic ball. WUson traveled across the e Genhe believed said Trujillo slightly higher than a month earon d St. the Lawrence eral Diaz was somewhere In rapids lier for barley, hogs, lambs, wool, Trujillo and predicted, his eggs and hay, the U.S. Agriculture River last year. Since the San Juan is a tributary of the Colorado early capture with other assas- Department reported today, j sins still at large. He said if they Statistical Re- River, he. hopes the junket will The resisted they would be shot; But portingdepartment's Service said declines were serve as a tuneup for a run down to : he that take them alive hoped for potatoes, veal calves, the Colorado later this summer. y to question them about the assas- reported to Stavely said Wilson hoped sheep, chickens, turkeys, and T sination plot, ji wholesale milk. No changes were make 30 miles a day. The trip will He said there had been abso- recorded for corn, wheat, oats, begin at Mexican Hat and end at a point above the Glen Canyon lutely no mass arrests through- milk cows and butterfat. out the Dominican Republic as Dam construction site- - The river runs through some of the most reported in the foreign. press. But he did admit that all ships were uninhabited areas of the state. searched before j leaving here to Stavely said they expected the make sure none of the assassins trip to take about five or. six days. were aboard. . ' , i f;.v Trujillo said, only '200 persons By MYRON FEINSILBER had bee narrested in all and that United Press International only between. 50 and 60 were still, SHORT HILLS, N.J. (UPD A being held. Those in j air were; expert marksman who friends of the assassin's families,! had been under psychiatric care he said. Asked if he feared another in- for a year killed his father, an SALT LAKE CITY (UPD Damvasion from Cuba he said he did! A&P food chain executive, and age may run as high as $1 million not because "I would feel sorry- then held police off for 90 'dra- in the fire at two' Salt Lake City for 'any members of any group matic minutes with a gun, in each buildings early Friday. which attempted to land on our hand before surrendering today to Damaged by the flames 'were shores. And if Castro , is among a courageous detective. the Utah Pickle Co 741 s. 3rd The boy, Robert Besch, Jr., West and the AAA Textile Co., them the beard probably' would scion of a family linked to the 739 S. 3rd West. The three-alarfly off his face." r If He also denied he had anything founder of the Great Atlantic & blaze damaged $400,000 worth of against the Roman Catholic Pacific Tea Co., the A&P's trade merchandise at the Pickle com church and said if he was trying name, gave no reason for shoot Another $70,000 worth of ta'oust it ' he would not have ing his father, Robert R. Besch, pany. equipment and bottle caps was buried his father in a Catholic in their $100,000 home here. lot. " '. church. ' r Owners of the textile company Father's Rule to estimate loss. declined Are Nice, As for his father's rule, Tamales he said, "he made a Dominican But You Can Republic prosperous1 and a great cduntry out of nothing. The show- Overdo Good Thing " ing he made speaks for itself." SALT LAKE CITY; Percy ZAPATA, Tex. (UPD Roy Security police were reported 11 W. Malvern 71, James But Parsons, be more he on in three Mohon likes tamales. alleged closing assassins of Generalissimo Rafael lieves a man can get too much Ave., (2625 South) died Friday. Funeral Monday noon, 260 E. L. Trujillo and a government of a good thing. South will Temple. Peter W. Bernt-sespokesman promised, "we. Recently, Mohon went hunting. 665 Musser Ct. (755 East) 78, have them all incustdy, dead or He killed a wild javelina, a type of pig that thrives in this arid died Wednesay. Funeral was Satalive, before long' j; unThere also were reports of urday. Mrs. Sarah Minnie Toone Southwest country. rest in the provinces but on the He found a Moxican family who Jones, 82, 3172 S. West Temple surface all was serene in Ciudad said they would butcher the ani- died Wednesday, Funeral was Saturday. EditH Mae Sandusky Trujillo. The genera belief was mal for him for a small fee. that there' was "something to" 84, 103 Thirstledown Lowrance, Several days later a; frozen U.. S. state department reports of package arrived, at his home. Dr., Columbia, Mo., died. Thurs' Dominican unrest. .7 day. Funeral, Monday, 2 p.m., Fully expecting hams, porkchops 260 Government sources disclosed and E. South' Temple. Peter Louis bacon, Mohon opened the that during the funeral services package. I ns i d e were frozen Blatnick, 60, 225Hj S, West Temple, died Friday. Funeral Monday 10 a. yesterday for the slain Trujillo tamales. the headquarters of the opposition m., 36 E. 7th Sol LeRoy C. Hors-leDomia was raided here by 69, 1556 Redondo Ave., (2015 party was it nican i mob on grounds Funeral South) died Thursday. ' communistic. 260 10 a.mL, South E. Monday The mob threw two persons (Continued from Elsie J. Neilson, Temple. Mrs. Page One) from the house into the street 65, 1038 W. 3rd! S., died Thursthen took all the furniture, papers, gory. The largest tractors offered day. Funeral Monday 2 p.m., S6 dishes and bed. clothing .out onto by the committee were in the n E. 7th S. class. the street and burned them. They TOOELE Roy T. Phillips, 51, The cable laid down two "im- died also burned the red and black Thursday, Funeral Monday striped flag of the opposition perative" demands' to be .met by 2 p.m., Tate Mortuary. ' movement . j Castro before further negotiation LOGAN Mrs. Dorothy Leone While the fire was blazing se- would, be1 considered. Rose Enlow, 49, died Wednesday, These were official confirma- Funeral curity police raced to the scene Monday noon in Millville and dispersed the mob which tion thai "Castro was prepared to LDS Chapel. shouted "long live Trujillo! Down carry out the exchange and a list with communism!' The police of names of the prisoners he prevented the mob from damag- had stated he was willing to release. ing the house itself. 1909) : j j Uprising Hinted 'Bubble Bbat Go Down San Juan River t j : - 150-mi- le f r j Uptrend Noted In May Farm Prices' 350-pou- nd La-chin- Ciu-da- " Boy, 14, Shoots Father to Death Damage Mounts In Utah Blaze ld ' j . -- - I i m j ! - 8uCCjiii2 jtyrs. Mary Auce Allman, early Payson dressmaker, ' dies at the age of 90. 90-Year-Q- " . y, 15-to- ' j - i ; j j GOP Chiefs w 1 (Continued fromj Page One) could directly affect the prospects of potential candidates for the 1963 presidential! nomination. ? h 1 'f-- Many Republicans expect former Vice, President Richard M. Nixon, the 1960 presidential nominee, to run for governor of California next year. If he does, he must win to stay in the running for 1964. Another prospective candidate, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, must win reelection r, next year. And Sen. Barry conhero servative wing, will be directing the campaign to elect more Republicans to the Senate. V s l Itf fill " ( v" V - J1 Gold-wate- D-Ari- z., of-th- COIFFURE CAUTION NEW YORK (UPI) Traction on the hair In response to the demands of style and fashion is held responsible for the excessive hair loss being found in an increasing number of young women. Drs. Jacob Bleibert and Mar-ti- n H. Wortzel, reporting in! the Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey, said that the nearly bald patients are advised to stop having their hair stretched and pulled on "rollers"; for the high and other coiffures The mother of a Provo woman, Mrs. Lillian Vt Hovey Brandt, 83, diedat the Beaver County Hospital in Milford, Friday evening!' l Mrs. Brandt was born in MillPAYSON Mrs. Holla J. Taylor. Richey, 70, 169 N. 2nd W., Pay-so-n, ville, Cache County, MayI 13, 1878, died Saturday morning in a daughter: of Joseph G. and SPRINGVILLE Mrs. Eliza . the Payson Hos- Mary Ann Hulse Hovey .i'Sne was Bate in! 78, died ;Meneray, Salt married toi Emil Bradt , Thursday pital of natural Lake City, June 17, 190ll He died at 3 P.m., in a Proyo hospital , causes. f She was born' I July, 19, 1937. She was a mem- following a long illness. ). Oct. 26, 1890, at f ber of the LDS Church, j She was born Aug. 17, 1882' in B e a v e r, a ? Shells survived by daughters, Springvillet, the daughter of Jos-- 'l d a u g h t e r of Mrs. William (Winona) Box,, Proand Clara Carter Bate. eShe Hyrum J. and vo; Mrs. Deloy (Iola), Catter, Mil- eph married William II. Meneray, Edwards Ann Mrs. Ronald (Francis) ford;f 1900. They 'were later June She 12, Taylor. Schaerrer, Salt Lake. City: 10 married Benja- - I She divorced. attended schools in grandchildren; 29 min Richey. He one brother, fourj sisters, Springville and was' a member of i died in 1934.Mrs. liicuey Bert Hovey and Mrs. Frances the LDS Church. She was educated in Springville Heen, Orem ; Mrs. May me Ncel, j She is survived by a son andjj.' schools, and was a member of Whittier, Calif.; Mrs.j . Hazel two daughters, Howard Menerav. the LDS church, Chandler, , Weiser, Ida.;;- - Mrs. Bakejrsfield, Calif.; Mrs. Lois A cafe owner most of her life, Nesta Lauritzen, Hyrum. j Mrs; Jtfonrpe, San Francisco she most recently operated a cafe Catalina', services are pending. Josephine Mclvenna, Funeral in Provo. two Calif.j; three grandchildren brothers,, one sister, Mrs, Harry Surviving are a' son, Bill' Mat-- ' DIME STORE GEMS tinson of Leland; a daughter, Salt Lake City; Leslie J. NEW YORK (UPI) --j S. S. Hper, Mrs. Scherl (Nell) Peterson. Ce Ralph Bate, and dime store Batej Springville; dar City; --two sisters, Mrs. Stella Kresge isCo., a five to Fork. Spanish cash in' on hoping AViUiams and, Mrs. Alberta Davis, chain, Fumeral serviices will be jd the nation's prosperity, y It has p both of Price; six grandchildren 1 p.m., at the Monday! and 10 greatgrandchildren. !' established a "genuine diamond Vheeler ; Mortuary Chapel an and gold jewelry departFuneral services will.be Tues- ment." Cheapest the under direction item is a.' $7.77 Sprin gville,ISTielsori of the Spring-yillday at 1 p. m. in the Claudiri-Lind- e diamond pandant. Most expensive: 6f j t tenth,1-LDWard. Friends Mortuary Chapel in Span- a $99 diamond, ring. f ish Fork, with Bishop Roe jf. at the place of service call may Wilde of the Payson Third LDS Monday from 11 a.m. to time of Ward in charge. Friends may call services, also at the mortuary. service.-'." at the mortuary Monday from 7 Burial will be in the Springville .Burial will be in the Springville to 9 p. m. arid Tuesday prior to Evergreen Cemetery. ; evergreen Springville Woman, 78 i n; ! t Id . i con-ductc- . Mary Alice Allen Allman, SO, of 450 S. 500 E., Payson, died Saturday of causes incident to age. She was born Fell. 13, 1871, in Provo, the daughter of William and Eliza Ann Fenn Allen. She received her education! in .Nephi and Provo and later attended the BY Academy. She was married to Thomas M. Allman, Dec. 3, 1896 in Provo. Their marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He died Jan. 10, 1948. She had lived in Provo all her married life with the exception of the last eight years when she resided with her daughter in . Payson. . .Mrs. Allman helped to set the type f or the first (newspaper in Nephi. She was a dressmaker for. many years. She was a member of the LDS Church and had worked in Relief Society and Primary organizations. She was a member of the Daughters of Utah t Pioneers. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. William E. (MelbaV Wyler Payson; Mrs. Clifford (Marva) Mckell,' San Francisco, Calif.; Mrs. George F. (Edna) Bowles, Provo; 21 grandchildren; j 14-car- at G:-an- e. S.! -- Cemetery, -- i ivvm - . I r . M t -I- 1 muni' iiwrgm, .... ; ; H' t ." r-m- nf t: - . - ' . ' . : 64 great-grandchildre- n: ' t ' f i . , , 'a B , v ,1 , Funeral services will be held Tuesday, 11- a.m., at the Berg Drawing Room Chapel in Provo, with Verl Allman, former bishop of Provo Seventh LDS Ward, of, ficiating. , Friends may call at the mortuary from, 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, and Tuesday prior to services. the Prpvo City' Burial will be Jin ' Cemetery. - Says Von Braun U.S., Russ Start Even on Race To WHEATON, 111. (UPI) America's chief rocket 4 5 ' Put Man on Moon ' i i f f V ? 4 - h I f i i ' ' - One of experts, Saturday night said as far as shooting a man to the moon, Jboth the United States and Russia are starting "from scratch."Werner von Brauri, addressing students said rockets required for the job are vastly more powerful than those now in use by both nations Added von Braun: "I'm convinced we' have the capabilities of putting a man on "the moon before the Russians." Vori Braun said that Russia's lead inrocket power was due to Russian Soviet decisions to develop an intercontinental, missile in the 1940s despite the large thrust required. He said America decided to delay td develop a smaller thrust. ? is t ; . ' s vM f, ; I V. ? f I l M - f I it - ' 1 with t-- . Two Leaders Hold SALT LAKE CITY (UPD - .1-- 1 Debate OrPpwer Development Issue ! ; Death Claims - ' if Woman of Payson Dies i . Dies in Milford Elizo Bate Mencroy - 1 N Of Payson Dies At 70 great-grandchildre- Allen Utah Obituaries n, Provoan's Mothei j 31-ye- ar - 1 '' ' - Holla Richey " , . -- - 1" Castro Weighs Deadlock On war..'- 1 2 i Horsemen, jeep possemen and from the Utah County Sheriff's foot searchers were called in Sat office and members of the Utah y urday; afternoon after an County Jeep Posse, participated in combing of the mountains east of the search under the direction of Orem,' when the object of their Sheriff Ralph Chappie. Orem boy, rearch, a Danny Newell, 16, son of Mr. and turned up apparently, safe in Mrs.; Dan Newell, 253. N. 400 E., Logan. Orem. became the object of the If was reported that approxi search Saturday morning when his mately 30 men, including some parents notified authorities he had been missing since Wednesday. Saturday afternoon his mother no tified officers she had received a letter from him, written from Logan. to a Dannv drove his Tote-Got- e point about a mile northeast of the Oren. Cemetery in the Orem Sunday, June 4, 1961 foothills, abandoning, it there. It PROVO was found by members of his famPicnic, and Twinkle Academy in the alarm. who turned And Shine. ily, Sheriff Ralph Chappie, called in., Paramount Pepe to the search Saturday morning, Pioneer Return To Peyton ' "T a search including horseorganized Place, men and jeep possemen. They had OREM .; Geneva .The Magnificent combed the areas of Dry Canyon, The and Horse. Soldiers. American Fork Canyon and the Seven, !'intervening foothills before the Closed Scera! . . search was called off. ' and The Alamo, Timpahogos all-da- Mrs. Florence Martha Davis Springer, 60, former Provo woman, died in Phoenix, Ariz. early Saturday morning following a long illness; Mrs. Springer was born .Sept. 15T1901 in Provo, the daughter of William Burdell and Martha Ashton Davis. She was' educated in the Provo schools. She married Kennedy Thornton, Apr. 24, 1920 in Salt Lake City. They were later divorced. 'Later she was married to Phillip O. Springer, Feb. 23, 1931 in Los Angeles, Calif. She was a member of the LDS Church. Mrs. Springer is survived by her Jiusband of Phoenix; one son, A. K. Thornton, Salt Lake City; Man Dies On Campus of Heart Attack 1 ..' ; Stops Two leaders in the private vs. public power development controversy for the Upper Colorado River met In a public debate Friday that went mainly down cost lines. E. M. Naughton, president of Utah Power and Light Co., and Floyd Dominy reclamation com missioner, appeared in the discussion. Naughton declared the private - groups could do a better job of building backbone "power lines from Glen Canyon Dam and said repayment of ' obligations would be made ahead of the government . construction plan. Dominy and Harvey McPhail, former Reclamation Bureau employe and "presently executive director of Colorado River Basin Consumers P o w e r,1 disagreed. FOR HOME OFFICE INDUSTRY Crystsl cteaf c la Ci40T V.rttX, Now you can climfnats g!anv fcsct cni em fade damage with revolutionary ZVtU STOP 6lass Coating. Is cpplied. . diirectly to your window cl!ovftg pzrlzS ck tide view ct ; . . KJKy cjsd SUN-STO- P all times. I Ca esc absolutdy prevents i?3tvcJ rays from fadina caroeis. draoes end furniture. It absorbs 86 of th on' infrared heat rays onid cuts out 95 cf ing glare. SUN-STO- P Tiqhi U dsz r.. to cry tssm . lzi tsrsrs eye-irrita- K CALL OR WRITE FOR FREE L2TIUA7Z1 Absolutely No Obligation I X ' f SCHOOL FOR PRESIDENTS The famous clock tower of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., appropriately illustrates one fact in the lives ox six U.S. presidents. All graduated from this university. They are? John Adams (1755), John Quincy Adams, (1787), Rutherford B. Hayes (Harvard Law School, 1845), Theodore Roosevelt (188Q), Franklin D. Roosevelt (1904) and John F. Kennedy (1940). Closest runner-u-p school in this category -- Is the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, JLlzZsUss end TylsrL xMzh thres presidents fcttaded , r currently faihicaabl. rj X FLOWERS for the J ft DIAL FR 01 Phono AC Provo Floral 201 W. 1st S.. Provo 1698 South State 5-34- 20 Orcm Utah |