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Show 'rr-- i"' "' w - Good Neighbors Sweep S.L. Entrance of Litter Litter-allspeaking; Salt Lake Citys Civic Beautification Program hit the road Saturday morning. About 200 hardy y rake-wieldin- Local News Features Section w m f 0 alt fctlic Sfilmnr II Salt Lake City, Utah r V TV Fare, Page H-1- 6 Sports July 18, 1965 Sunday Morning L r'jr f A Page One souls attacked litter in the bor- lumber, magazines, wrappers, row pits on both sides of 21st boxes, sacks you name it South for one mile west of 3600 were cleared and the eyeaway West. Beer cans, Christmas trees, sore eliminated. The cleanup started at 9 a.m. to clean both sides of the major highway approach to Salt Lake City and make all residents in the region beautification conscious. Great Success Campaign officials termed the cleanup a great success on both fronts. Girl Scouts, groups, Boy Scouts and garden club members made up the bulk of the workers. Three giant trucks from the Salt Lake County Sanitation Department, five trucks from the Utah State Department, of Highways and a truck from the, Associated General Contractors were filled with litter during the three-hou- r project. In addition, the Highway provided caution signs, and the State Highway Patrolyand Salt Lake County sheriff provided officers to slow the 4-- Lauded Program Salt Lake County Commissioner Marv Jenson, also on the scene lauded the program and raked up some debris for a While. Well get an ordinance,. con trolling Jhis . sort of thing and one which will require property owners their land free of junk which is a hazard to health and beautification, the com missioner said. fhe project The cleanup-w- as of the highway approaches committee of the Salt Lake Tribunes beautification program. This group is headed by Reed Stalder and A. Arden Larson. . ep Biggest Offender Hows this for cooperation! Its only part of a crew of some 200 Girl Scouts, members, Boy 4-- H Scouts and garden club enthusiasts who turned out Saturday morning to really attack a major Salt : Enjoying Life Showers Drench Birthday 89 Nears for Pres. Smith Poor Roads, Work for Youth Southern Areas Showers and thundershowers became rather general Biggest offenders of highway over most of the southern Inlitter, health officials pointed Leaders of the highway cleanup project literally showed the out, are trucks which do not termountain Region Saturday, and while not too heavy in ,way as demonstrated by Mrs. Ernest E. Knudsen, president of have their debris coveredr Sev"The Salt Lake District, Utah Federation of Womens Clubs, and eral such trucks were stopped most of the area were moderBernard V. Berry, Utah State Highways maintenance supervisor. right at the cleanup area and ately heavy in central and southern portions. their drivers warned. Near Provo, rains were Lou Barkan, Salt Lake County -to By Maurice A Jones cause some Board of Health enforeemenUef-ficer- , on Utah Highway 68 told the drivers that flooding Tribune Church Editor about three miles north of judges had been asked by his Counting birthdays is a futile Provo recorded a to offenders the give department n occupation its how you feel quarter of an inch of rain maximum penalty. that counts and whether yolTare 4 and 5 p.m. Biggest group of helpers at and I certainly Temperatures were a bit Nothing Serious the cleanup site Saturday were enjoying life, am. cooler over the region Saturfrom toe fi Southwest Salt Lake world the nape of my neck ; BACK OF MY HEAD: SomeThis Is the statement of Jo- day, and forecasts call for Group which had about 25 times the world becomes too to current problems. . . . seph Fielding Smith, president very similar westher and- temhand. on members Fae Gygi, . The much. pressure-gaug- e e Does Heloise really save of Council of Twelve Apos- peratures on Sunday, with the Louise Bailey and Lila reaches the boil- - , Is Ann Landers sticks? Church of Jesus Christ of readings in Utah mostly in the tles, led the for this girls ing point . . . Latter-dareally a grandmother? . . . Will Saints, and son and 80s. The problems Tom Smith beat the United project. of two distinguished grandson loom too big... States to the moon? . . . Will Valuable Help church leaders. That's why I Jerry Lewis be our next SecreThe Girl Scout Junior Troup make it . an anSecond Longest Tenure tary of State? 259 provided several young lanual habit to President Smith will be 89 on g chore. turn my back on You think I care? I dont dies for the No other living LDS the world one . . . Im looking the other way They were led by Mrs. Jack Monday. Church leader except President Betts. each year. day today. . . . to It helps Others whose help was valua- David O. McKay has had a Will the Medicare bill cover ble were Jim Brusatto, superin- longer tenure as a general aucleanse the attoe- tendent of the Dan thority. operations for mosphere, gives A Clearfield boy and a Kearns nails? . . . What will happen to department; Bernard Barry, When an honorary degree of man were electrocuted Saturday new morale to Valentine an old. vigor, builds stamina for Siamese cats if Thailand goes maintenance supervisor, Salt doctor of letters was conferred within about two hours of each the hard months to come . . . communistic? . . . Are trading Lake District, Utah State De- on him in 1951 at Brigham other in separate accidents. Is partment of Highways; Mrs. Er- Young University, the following and creates confidence in the stamps The boy was killed while huntfuture. Tuesday Weld going to change nest E. Knudsen, president, Salt citation was read: ing for angleworms with, a her name to Wednesdav Lake District, Utah Federation From his youth he has de- homemade electric shocker and Today, the back of my head to Weld? . . . of Womens Clubs, and Mrs. Ted voted himself to the preservat- the man was killed when a telethe world! Wont you join me? Miller, Mrs. Don M. Rees and ion- of history, the forthright vision antenna he was installing SPACE RACE . . . rat race Mrs. J. Arthur Wood, of the Salt enunciation of scriptual teach- contacted electrical . transmisSO YUL BRYNNERS gonna . , . silver Lake Council of Women, who take his toupee and live in Swit- . . gold standard ings, and the turning of the sion lines. dollar shortage . . . handled registration. problem zerland? hearts of the children to their balanced budget . . . Will RichSpecial to The Tribune fathers. Under hisliand the His- - So Hubert Humphrey doesnt ard Nixon run again? . . . Will A Office torians and the KEARNS history have enough to do? So Mayor J. Barry Goldwater walk again? toof to the church have Kearns matured man, attempting Lee build is going to Bracken gether and a worldwide Genea- mount a television antenna on another basement in the new BIG WORRIES, these. . . . But logical Society has wrought mir- the roof of his home, was elecnot today, thanks . . . Im taking Metropolitan Hall of Justice? acles of research and systema- trocuted Saturday about 5:05 a vacation from the world. I'm tic accomplishment. . . . p.m. So what? I couldnt care looking the other way. The back Pronounced dead on arrival at less. Im looking the other of my head to everything. . . . Wrote 20 Books the Valley West Hospital was way. Monday will mark the 64th Raymond L. Welker, 4516 W. Bah! . . . you worry about Let the population explode . . . it. . . . Im year President Smith, has 5500 South. lookingt he other Let the stock market act like a worked in the Histori- - eputy-Sheriff Ronald Church . The to Tribune way. JSpecial Let DeGaulle cheap Mr. Welker was said B-1 See Column A Salt Lake Boy TOOELE Page resign from the human race. . . . SAM, THE SAD CYNIC, SAYS: Scout was missing on Stansbury Let Red China stop doing the A man has reached maturiIsland on the western side of worlds laundry. ty when he realizes there is no Great Salt Lake Saturday night I couldnt care less.1 Im looksuch thing in the world as a and Tooele County sheriffs deing the other way! friendly loan! puties and Utah Highway Patrol SO CONGRESS wants to put troopers were conducting an search for him. on labels so bars poison candy Object of the search was Lyn people wont die of overweight? . . . So Eddie Fisher is going to don Larsen, 12, son of Mr. and So Mrs. Winfred Larsen, 701 5th get married again? what's grand about the grand Ave. So Governor Rampton jury? Alert Sheriff is thinking about bringing back Salt Lake Municipal Airport The office here was sheriffs tokens? facilities went dark Saturday plastic sales tax So what? You worry about it. at 9 :40 p.m. when a truck hit alerted T at 3:30 p.mT and a I'm not even looking today. . . . and knocked down an electric search was organized. The .youth went to the island So Dr. - Ben Casey left a power pole northwest of the terminal. earlier Saturday with 14 other inside a sponge charity patient. There were no lights in the Scouts under the supervision of How old is Marlene What ever happened terminal, on the runway or Scoutmaster Douglas Merrill. Sheriff Fay Gillette said the "to Loretta Young? . . . Will Jack other airport facilities until Paar ever return to television-land- ? crews from Utah Power and boy had been walking along the ' Lighr Co. restored service at northeast .island shore with oth .v!T 10:30 p.m.. er Scouts. He told his compan. Hah L Who cares? The Lack oriights bn the run-- " ions he was going to climb to .back of my head to the world ! ways of the giant airport com- the top of a nearby hill. Will Salt Lake have a psofes-- " plex stopped all landings and The boy, the sheriff said, went sional baseball club in 1966? . . . takeoffs for more than 20' over the top of the hill and has Will Salt Lake have a profe- minutes. riot .been. seen since... . ssional baseball club in 1965 ? 7 " The blackout affected all of in Search Plane did not Will BYU field a foothall team the new terminaL-b-ut A JUtah Highway Patrol plane this fall. . . . Are there real beat- bother the old. terminal 0rea. ' The power cutoff did not ef- joined the search about 6 :30 niks at Dixie College?" . : Are continuedTlights over there anyCommunisto"afThe fect auxiliary: powerforFecT--' p.mv-aeral Aviation Agency facilities the island until nightfall. University of Utah? and communications, but oc- -- Assisting in the search were : BIG PROBLEMS, these 7. curred between the main and the Scouts, sheriffs deputies but you worry about em. Im auxiliary power supplies for Jim Parks and Glenn Caldwell looking the other way! lighting of the airport terminal and Utah Highway Patrol TroopJoseph Fielding Smith, president of the Council of Twelve The back of my head to the and er Neil Bishop. landing strip: Apostles of LDS Church, will celebrate his 89th birthday. heavy-enough- Dan Valentine's a. bet-wee- ... ... Pop-sicl- n y ... n ... - S.L. Boy, 12, on Lake Island yo-y- ... -D- 5, ... all-nig- ... ... Airport in Dark As Pole Snaps ... nd . By Harry E. Fuller Tribune Staff Writer 'T have founcT many of our indivldual'prob-lem- s confronting oevery county smaller towns thinking in terms we have been in, he said, but of some kind of manufacturing all 12 counties visited have at which could supplement their least one bad road they need agricultural economy. state help for. Almost all are interested Ire Next to road worries, rural developing the tourist potential Utah seems concerned with a of their area, the governor s; future for its young-adultthe said. governor observed. He pointed to Fillmore, Mil There a deep realization lard County seat, as one area that a modernized agricultural seriously trying to improve its economy just does not provide situation by purely local efforts. enough job opportunities. The Determine Pressures young people are going away from home for employment and They have," the chief executhis naturally worries those con- tive said, put together a fund cerned about the future of their for a study designed to detercommunities. mine just what the local reThere are -- ; Better roads and permanent jobs for young people are the major pleas heard by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton7 as he tours Utah. If there Is one thing that bothers every county we have visited so far, said, "it is inadequate roads. Future for Youth Soon after his inauguration, Gov. Rampton said he planned to tour every county in the state. So far this summer he has hit 12, mostly in southern and northrnor eastern Utah. - Is I sources for an expanded econ: omy are. Gov. Rampton said the new State Industrial Promotion Commission, created by the 19 Legislature, will increase Its contacts with local leaders and agencies eager to acquire iri- dustrial activity. The governor said a growing interest throughout Utah in attracting new business to normally rural areas constitutes a certain change in attitudes. - -He said it indicates a decrease in much of the provincialism that too often marked sparsely settled sections of the state. "And; Gov; Rampton reported, he has not detected any great fear among rural Utahns that the states recent legislative reapportionment will disenfranchise them. Not Serious Problem . Electric Shocks Claim 2 In Separate Accidents back-bendin- county-sanitatio- Lake City problem rubbish near highways. Sponsors called cleanup project on 21st South a great success. working with a friend, Don Ave., Midvale, when the accident happened, but Mr. Silcox escaped injury. Deputy Kilpatrick said Mr. Welker and Mr. Silcox were on the roof of Mr. Welkers horn? working with the antenna when a gust of wind caught the aerial and blew it east off the roof onto power transmission lines. Holes were burned in the hat Mr. Silcox was wearing, but he was not hurt. Sil-co- h Special to The Tribune An CLEARFIELD Clearfield boy hunting for angleworms in the backyard of his home with an electrical worm Summit County shocker was. killed Saturday To July 18, 1965 afternoon, about 3 p.m. Golden Lynn Johnson, son of To July 18, 1964 r"' Mr and Mrs.- Golden Johnson, All of 1964 351 S. Main, Clearfield, was pronounced dead at the scene of the -- accident. Clearfield Police Officer Tom Wardle said the youth apparently was hunting fish worms by means of a metal rod with a long1 wire which was plugged into an electrical socket near the home. Officer Wardle said investigation indicated the boy was standing on wet ground at the time of the accident and apparently touched the rod with his right hand after failing to grip the tape wrapped handle. 0 Those who are politically inclined still worry about our apportionment changes, the governor said, but most of the people we have contacted dont seem to think it is a very serious problem.7- - Crash Kills Murray Man, Hurts Four in Summit Special to The Tribune CASTLE ROCKrSummit of the Wyoming border on U.S. 30S;, Chanley Vincent Andersen, 1 Murray E. 3825 South, apparently died man was killed and four persons instantly: according to Sgt. Ted injured including his wife and London, Utah highway patrol. two sons Saturdays 3:45 p.m. Son Injured in a two-cacollision: just south In serious condition at Cottn-woo- d LDS Hospital late Saturday was the victims son, County A r; Sale? A Wide-Scal- e George J. Andersen, 12, who un derwent surgery for a fracturecT leg- - , , was listed in satisfactory . condition. suffering from shock andahead laceration. Clearance one of Salt. The Downtown Million-Dolla- r A second son, Robert L. AnLake Citys largest sales passed its second daySaturday, dersen, 10, was released to his with only Monday remaining for bargain hunters,- grandparents Saturday night fols sale is over,: merchanAlthough the wide-scal-e lowing treatment, dise on downtown shelves Monday morning will not be the Cars Sides wiped of eariler shoppers,- - Stanford P. Dar- Driver of the second vehicle, of the Retail Merchants Assn., said ger, secretary-manage- r Nelson Edward Maurer, 70, Saturday. HimtingtonJBeach.Calif .was in The merchants are bringing ouLcLiot of new goods good condition at Summit Counand greater yalues that, we saved specially ty Hospital, Coalville. Mr. Darger said. Some. of the better bargains were stored The eastbound Maurer vehicle away (and marked for Monday only. sideswiped the westbound AnStore hours Monday will be from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. AH dersen auto after, apparently, participating stores more than 30 will be identified by bancrossing the center line, Sgt. ners in their windows, , London said. IPs Worth Million ;Jdrs. Adell Andersen, 44, - two-third- ay, r |