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Show 1C MARCH 27. 1955 Utah County, Utah .sundAy SUNDAY HERALD Federal Jury Finds Sandy Man Guilty of Bank Robbery - after final arguments: day night wasfound guilty by a tould assess penalties jury, of robbing the Sandy The judge i 155 last of $31,243 ;to up Aug.;27; years in prison and City Bank r . U.S. District Judge A, Sherman Counsel the defense for indicated would sentence he said Christenson old carpenter on April a motion' for retrial may be filed. the Wagstaff was the principal wit 7. Bond was continued at $15,000. ' m closing hours of his five-ness; I The- - jury of six men and six day triaj. He claimed he was 1n "women found Wagstaff guilty of Davis! copnty at the time the robrobbing the bank. Intent to, com- bery! ocdurred and said some $2,- mit robbery and assault on bank 000; in cash he had a few days president Heber J. Burgon with .a aftei from came gamjthe holdup bling winnings at Las Vegas, Nev. Gambling money was ' raised, he said by buying and selling grain. $20,-000;fin- e, : -- i 38-ye- ar -- ; On For Missing 7-Year-- I s i r i 8 I i ; Letters to Editor Old ' DETROIT (UP) A small army of Boy Scouts joined law enforce! ment 'officials in three states and Canada Saturday In the search for d Barbara missing ' rGaca. Police, who feared the girl had fallen victim of a sex maniac;! picked, up, questioned and released all known sex deviates. Citizen-detectivHooded the De-- j troit police switchboard with possible tips and clues as the reward for information leading to theJ girl's whereabouts rose tc $1,500. All incoming clues were checked . as fast as they came in, but few ' were substantial Brown-haire- d Barbara, who was . to have made, her first Communion May h Was reported missing shortfy after noon Thursday. She! lived in the northeast section . 0 Detroit. T Police combed a square area ; around the Gacas home ui radio cars and on foot, checking vacant buildings, peeking into garbage cans. One officer indicated that the Detroit public works department "might,, be called onto check all severs in the northeast section. lower Authorities, throughout Ohio in and and Indiana Michigan the Canadian province of Ontario Don'tj Underestimate Russ .Capabilities, ' V--'- Editor Herald: In your United Press article of March 16 headlined 4,U. S. Lagging Behind Russia In Training of Engineers, President Van I of makes a Tecb LeC Georgia most ; effective comparison be tween5 the number of engineers graduating in the; .United States as compared to Russia. However, his last two para graphs seem to destroy everything ithat he has said in the foregoing; material, and will tend to lead ;tbd United States into the same sense of lethargy and well being! that we have experienced i . . j vtithZ -- ... . - , T,U iicAi uiujr. who emphasized the point that the quality of ball bearings being nroduced would not meet the minimum standards established by United States Production. Somehow or another, Russian industrial machinery is rolling and it Is apparently not being notice ably hampered by ball bearings -that do not properly. The professional men of Rus sia are procured by most selec tive systems and are coddled to the point where they become ex treme specialists. Their cradu ates in . general, have technical training one year beyond that of the normal engineering graduate fori so long. with a bachelor of science de Who was it that dveloped the gree in the United States. The 'Mig;' that was so effective entire country's economy is gear against bur men in Korea? Who ed toward industrial output. Let us. not under estimate Russia's developed 'the Atom and in Russia? They, were not all capabilities. G e rjm & n recruited scientists. Sincerely yours, Somes years ago I listened to a J. J. JENSSON talk by the vice president of Head, Engineering Science Dept Timkin Roller Bearing Company, rBrigham Young University es TT . many, Advises Educator seven-year-ol- ier is responsible for the break- - to discuss; enlarging the govern By LOUIS GUILBERT United Press Staff Correspondent down. ment They said Diem's position r was An ultimatum to the premier 'strengthened by the' backing ed campaign against the CommuSAIGON. Indochina (UP) Three of Observers said their chief SANDY (VP- )- Vandalism est!- - i . nists. Emperor Bao Dai. rebellious religious sects spurned from the sects to reorganize his however, aim, appeared to be to mated at more than $1,300 to the But, they insisted Diem was not minWASHINGTON to (UP- )- The Premier Nog Dinh Diem's las civil government in five days or face retain old feudal privi Alta Air Park in Salt Lake county their try to the ultimatum. civil strife expired Saturday was being IrfVesti gated by sheriff's such tax Army said Saturday that two ute efforts Saturday to avert leges 'as collecting. - f 2:30 a.m. EST, in Nam. e?Pircd Viet strife free out an answer. French tanks and, divisions, ,one airborne and one Some sources said that if Diem!officers Saturday. without an answer except that suparmored, will go to Europe next Clashes were reported , in the troops guarded the city against up plied by the government's' armed does -- nottwo-fol-capitulate they would r Curtis Ellsworth, owner of the T year fo replace wo divisions now teeming Chinese city of Cholon, risings d start a campaign, f First airport, .said damaae included in Germany, v , Saigon's twin city. There were no thav wulTf wage a COld War'itQjhiimin? nf a TsvTnrpraft gimlana ;, ;. The movement will mark the details. . lie was ready t9 enlarge his gov proached. force Bao Dai ,to return to Indo-L- . v: aw first overseas deployment from the Both sides the- government and ernment but only on his own LKJuy . aiung repairs in a nangar. china. United States of an airborne di- the rebellious religious sects-w- ere terms. They said he would not Normal activity in Saigon ground If this fails Three hangar doors, weighing 700 they will open! a ' vision since World War II- heavily armed. The sects said knuckte under to the sects de- almost to a halt as government hot war to wrest power by force. pounds each, were ripped down and. The 11th Airborne Division, Ft. the government must bear the re- mands to retain their; 43,000jman and French troops took up posihauled away. Several large holes Campbell, Ky,, will replace the sponsibility for "whatever happens private armies, to hav:aTwger tions around the waterworks army were Wasted through a metal roof ' Fifth7 Infantry Division at Augs now." voice' in the cabinet and to retain headquarters and other key spots I The food a shotgun. All hangarwindows with average manufactur burg, Germany, in June 1956. The Diem called a. meeting of the their feudal privile ges The three religious" sects are the ing company earns about 24 were smashed Third Armored Division, Ft. Knox, leaders of the three groups in an The sources said DienKprobably Hoa Hao. the Cao Dai and the cents on every dollar of sales,; Ellsworth said he is attempting Ky., will replace a division not yet effort to halt the crisis but they would invite leaders of thexsects Binh Xuyen which controls Sai and the average food retailers to nut thp flimort bark nn an named, starting in May, 1956. to the conference him and said Prem "the a ; one cent during earns boycotted on police. gon's the dollar. oajr operating basis The divisions are being rotated under the army's operation gyroscope, the new system for exchangdivisions with, over ing home-base-d seas divisions instead of rotating individual soldiers, t The Army has previously announced that the 10th Infantry Division at Ft. Riley, Kans., will change stations with the First In fantry Division at Wurzberg, Ger- - Duty in Europe . Is Vandals Wreck The three' sects, formed into: a Alta Air Park "national front,? demanded a unit- . SALT LAKE- CITY (UP- )- Jo. revolver.! A Verdict was reached at seph Herman Wagstaff, Sandy, Fri- about lr 1 p.m., some five hours Search Three Rebellious Religious Sects Spurn Viet Nam Premier Two Divisions Scheduled For I ) , frP -- The car sill America as been waitinjgfoir y v nL-Owjfl- ffr , f ; 22-mi- le bs . I ' :-- FUNNY BUSINESS were alerted. West Coast yMms- Maneuvers Completed SAN SIMEON, Calk. (UP) The 38th 'Regimental Combat ..Team - j sailed for Tacoma, Wash., after completing the final , phase of: "Operation .Surfboard," largest training exerjoint Army-Navcise since World War II. ' The last of the combat "team's y ; ' 6000 mechanized troops Were loaded aboard transports" at midnight Frday from the San Simeon beach in Southern California. ' " The Navy expedited loading with a new' technique called "sea enchelon" .which called for one ship at a time to load while the rest of the v s ,s e I s remained massed at sea out of range of simulated enemy shelling. Nearly V 30,000 soldiers, sailors and marines participated in the maneuvers. The 38th made a behind the lines of enerrpr .forces which controlled most of California. . The combat., team theoretically struck a soft spot in enemy' defenses and pushed inland to destroy an atomic rocket launcher. Gen, Willard, G. Wyman, Sixth Army' commander who directed the operation, praised all personnel involved. "Everyone who participated in this exercise gave his best," Wy man said. "Any mistakes made were those of the head and not of the heart. All phases were carried out with enthusiasm and spirit." I THg MAttNIFICgMT . - t,.. ipi ! t c.it5)k,NCfW-.- w. 306 t ititW V. that .M, th. i ver sees for a LOWEST PRICE 0UALITY 21 We hcv. NEW levels the load . . TtH "AS gM -- INCH POWER LAWN MOWER i'llJi.' jTwWgNr ...v? Mide Torsion-ILev- el H - . i and the Worlds most powerful engine! Instead of using conventional coil or leiaf springs to cushion the bumps, torsion bars absorb road shocks automatically before they can reach you. Driving is easier, less fatiguing and d much safer. And an ingenious levelizer keeps the new Packard always on an even keel. Compare this new Packard with whichever car you think is the finest made in America today. You arei invited to give both .cars the same" tests over the same terrain. Then decide which offers the most truly Juxurious performance. POWER-PACKE- D . . . 260 PACKARD V-AND 275 HORSEPOWER built by the master motor builders who pioneered the engine. The most powerful engines in any production car 260 horsepower in the Patrician and today full-leng- th the Four Hundred models, 275 in the Packard Caribbean . . . created for the mbst chscriminating motorists in America. 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The bar behaves exactly like a spring when it is twisted at one end or the other. In order t assure constant car riding level for any kind of load,. Packard has combined the torsion bar with a "load levelizer," or compensator, whose function it is-thold body height on an even keel regardless of passenger or luggage loads. . mis 170 North 1st West -- Provo ! I City . n ad ge fUl ' - t- ' Planned back in 1946, the family of fhigh torque, high efficiency valve-in-hePackard V-- 8 engines, for 1955 has had the benefit of a long-ranlook at the course of modern engine development. In addition, the new Packard V--8 has been proof-teste- d both in the the road.. Under sanction of the AAA Contest laboratory. and onfour-doV-- 8 sedan with' a Board, a Packard traveled 25,000 miles in a total elapsed time of 238 hours, 41engine minutes, 44.3 seconds, for. an average of 104.737 m.p.h. Pit stops aver ages only 49 seconds. Horsepower on the new V--8 engine design ranges from 225 and 245 on Clipper models to 260 on Packard cars. or so. write to Spears L1KK . 1 " COMPENSATOR arrested him there. It CIA N RIDE automatically TORSION-LEVE- L Former FBI Agent Jailed; Refuses To Reveal Source .nation." I America's new choice in fine cars the great new Packard is the result of years of planning, design--in- g and testing to build an individually distinctive automobile embodying more engineering advancements than any automotive achievement of our time. You will find it the most luxurious car in a VPackards. The new long line of history-makin- g Packard truly reflects your'pride in the finest. I Know a good numerologist? t" ing of a crime fighter for refusing to tell a grand Jury his sources of information used in investigation; of alleged police corruption. Plans for a "sympathy" demon stration gathered after Aaron Kohn, former FBI agent, began serving a 10 day sentence as the only person jailed in the, investiga tion he himself conducted, although a number of others were Indicted. Canon William S. Turner of the Trinity Episcopal Church said the jailing of Kohn for refusing to jeopardize the lives of his inform ants may "seriously hamper police investigative work throughout the! AA W1PPA TW .with exclusive ck 7 P Prr.HU. -- .1 - Phone 648 o |