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Show 1 I. rM 1 SUNID 12 1 "SSre ,,M County. Around! the World i..Ji SUNDAY HERALD Bandit Robs Provo Stor e At Saturday Rush Hou M Ousted Hungarian Reds Lived In Rich Splendor ttr 4 . " BUDAPEST (UP) Hungary's and made good their escape beousted Cammiinist leaders lived 'in cause their pursuers had no arms. capitalistic splendor in rich villas "If we had even one hand grenade connected jjbyj; a tunnel to. an air we could have stopped them," one I raid shelter, (leaders of the Hun- rebel said. garian revolution said . Saturday. Soldiers pf the rebel army .now SEOUL, Kofea (UP) Republic guard the homes of Budapest's of Korea President Syngman Rhee "Freedom HiH," which was re- has appealed to the people of named earjier this week after for- North Korea not to revolt against mer Comliwiiist party secretary their Communist government. An-drErnoe Gerpe land He said revolt would bring more bloodshed to Korea, and Vwe will Hegeduf s fled the ci,ty. Revoluti&naiies said the deposed push up north when the time , is Reds fled tn Soviet armored cars ripe." f f. ' v' u tin:. " Bl hLn; H1 An armed gunman staged a swift robbery at the cashier's booth of Provo Safeway store at the rush hour Saturday night and escaped with an estimated $1,000 in cash. a Provo Police broadcast ' of man the a and description tentative identification of his getaway car, but no leads on his capture had materialized late eJ. ' two,1 s Saturday Frank W. Jones Jr., manager of the store at 2nd North and J as ex-Prem- ier v 4K if 't 3rd West, told police the man approached the booth about 6 p.m behind a customer who was cashing a check. When he reached the window the bandit pulled out a paper sack and what appeared to be a .45 cal. military automatic pistol with an order to "fill it up." Wbile other clerks and the approximately 75 persons 'in the store were unaware of what was taking place, the manager drew out from the cash drawer some bills five, ten and twenty-dolla- r and put them in the sack. As the bandit walked toward the north door of the store, Mr. Jones directed an employee, Wayne Hansen, to follow him and get the man's auto license number. The clerk reported the bandit got into a 1953 or 1954 Chevrolet Belair hard-to- p model sedan and " An Kefauver On MUNICH, Germany (UP) epidemic of polio in northeastern Hungary was reported Saturday. Radio Free Europe picked up the reports, coupled with an appeal for medical help, from the Hungarian rebel radio Miskolc. The reports said 150 persons were stricken in the area and that 30 others had died from the. disease. Whistle-Sto- p In Minnesota By WARREN DUFFEE United Press Staff Correspondent UP Sen. WITH KEFAUVER The ATHENS, Greece (UP) E&tes Kefiuyer climbed wearily Greek staff barred naval ' Saturday aboard a iraln Saturday for his warships of nations engaged in first "whistle stoj' day and Middle rattled through Minnesota with an waters. East hostilities from Greek 18 speech campaign schedule. tThe Tennesse Democrat, deserPARIS (UP) A one-tim- e termined id fight it out to the last, Gen. with the John plate landed at Lacrosse, Wis., by plane geant and bugle corps drum Pershing'3 and from Pittsburgh immediately who blew under the Arch of taps boarded the special campaign Ahe World War end at of train to cross the state line into Triumph his I will repeat performance this Minnesota find a long half day of Armistice Day. tracks campaigning 61, a retired Edwards, Hartley haired with his buxom, auburn railroad man fronvDennison, Tex., wife, Nancy. sound the bugle call at 'the It was one of the tougher sched- will and climax of a parade and ceremony ules on Kefiuver'js long a Paris American often hap hazard campaign arranged by .our. But lis staff accompanying Legion post. newsmen counted it no worse BUENOS AIRES (UP) Twenty-on- e than FrMayj's day and" night persons were under arrest tomotorcade thorough industrial Wes; day after taking part in a demontern Pennsylvania and his "saturation" tour of Massachu- stration in suppor of Egypt. Police used tear gas to break setts and Rhode Island: ( a column of 300 demonstrators up Kefauver5 aimed his rear platform talks squarely at the issues marching through downtown A second of farms iind cooperatives in his streets Friday night. withMinnesota marathon. His visit demonstration was dispersed out trouble. Heavy guards were was the Democrats' final bid for of Egypt, at embassies the this "swikg" .state's electoral placed B--r t a i and i n, Fiance Israel, votes, Russia. The Detnocratic vice - presidential npminee was keeping in jtoWh with his running ... closely mate,' Adlaii E. Stevenson, about the troubled Middle East situation. But he limed most of his fire at issues closer to the state the Democats hope to recapture in the Nov. 6 balloting. In a statement issued as he arrived .in Minnesota, Kefauver charged thai the Eisenhower adBy WILLIAM M. BATES ministration is taking "unusual" United Press Staff Correspondent actions to protect a group of bankEN ROUTE WITH NIXON (UP) ers who , hafe backed the Burrus Vice President Richard M. NixInc.! in a Texas ;of "ques- on reached the end of his 40,000-mil- e MiEs, tionable" government grain storcampaign trail Saturday, . age deal, Ff striking back at Adlai E. StevenThe Proficient's brother, Arthur son's attack on President Eisenhower's Middle East policies in his Edsenhowey is executive vice president of one of the sponsoring windup. Trust Oo. of banks, Cdmmerc Nixon scheduled six whistle stop v Kansas Cify, Mo. rallies in Ohio before heading for Washington, D. C, where he plans to remain for Tuesday's election. telecast Except for an election-ev- e from Washington, he? has no further scheduled campaign appearances. The vice president, who has carried the burden of the GOP election drive, climaxed six weeks of vigorous canpaigning with a naEast German tionwide rad?o-TBERIJNjj(UP) speech Friday Leader Walter Ul- - night at Hershey, Pa Communislj bricht said. Saturday Hungary will In biting terms, Nixon voiced not be permittee to leave me w- - the administration's reply to Steviet bloc, jjj venson's charge that Mr. EisenUlfcricht h said the pommunist hower's Midd'e Eastern policy has ' Party newspaper . Neues Deutsch-lan- d been an 'abysmal and catastrophImre ic failure." The reply was preattached policy in pared with close White House Nagy's new -- down-toy-the- -- 17-ho- ur - Nixon Reaches End of Long Campaign' Trail -- -- 4 I s: Hungary Will Not Be Pe hiitted To Quit Soviet Bloc V Premier antd-Sovi- Hungary. Ulbricht et j told 1 the parliament guidance. Nixon s j accused Stevenson of Party will prevent making "untrue," "irresponsible," "Western Imperialists" from re- and "inaccurate" charges against Coonomunisfiv storing. "cipitaHsm and exploitation" in Hngary. The Neus Deutschland accused Nagy in 'am editorial of "betraying Socialism" and said he can not legally anniil the Warsaw Pact because it wis ratified by an elected . parliament The War; aw Pact is the military agreement of the ..Soviet Woe to counter th Westen powers North Atlantic Tijeaty Organization. Examiners Consider to In Middle East GAINESVILLE, Fla (UP), Gen. James Van Fleet, former United Nations commander in V . . SALT LAKE CITY (UP) iThe Utah Board; of Examiners will hold iU biennial meeting . to consider claims a g a i n s t the ,state next Thursday, There a re 31 claims against the state this time. The largest one is for $25,000 made by Edward T. and Lilia X: He"slop, Tremonton, for the death of their daughter Oct. 15, 1955' in a traffic mishap involving al Utah Highway Patrol . i . . j .car. The patroj car .was chasing a !. speeder Van fleet Hits Allies7 Fighting -- State Against I fj the administration policies. Nixon dismissed them as "wild swings" of a man who knows he faces defeat Tuesday and said they showed the Democratic presidential candidate lacked "basic statesmanship." ti'henjt struck another vehicle inf ivtiich the girl, Garnet Heslo. , wai riding. The smallest claim is for $7.50 by Willis Ji. Proctor of Salt Lake City, who bays he tore his trousers on the corner of a table . owned by the tax! commission while, buying license plates.. Most of the claims ' are for amounts ranging from $10 to $250, Korea, charged Friday night that the Middle East fighting is ?the meanest thing any ally who has received our money could possibly do to Uncle Sam." Van Fleet in a speech at University of Florida homecoming festivities, made it clear that he denounced the opening of hostilities by Britain and France as well as Israel, x IVan Fleet discarded most of a speech he said he had prepared before Israeli armies moved into Egypt in order to discuss his view of the Middle East crisis. "I hope oiir nation can make it clear to England France. Israel and Egyptl that they must not brnig on this kind .of shooting war." Van! Fleet said. '; I .minmrtr i POST OFFICE ROCKIN DES MOINES, Iowa - " .. 1: Anglo-Frenc- jh, ,n f , rthe numbers 1. The state1 I name on the plate was riot identi' E8-102- fied. J Chief of Police Jesse W. Evans and Patrolman Elmo Halliday, - who investigated, obtained the following description of the gunman from Mr. Jones and Helen Christemsen, another store em- - i ployee working at the manager's booth: age height 6 ft. 2 in.; round face, ruddy complexion and bloodshot eyes; wearing a! white shirt, tan or light brown topcoat and fiat, The store manager said itT would not be possible to deter-- ) mine trie exact amount of cash taken h'f the' bandit untii'the stQre accounts Were checked at the end U of business Saturday night. i 45-5- 0; 'a- - i 11 I FRECH PILOT INJURED IN CRASH LANDING r - WASHINGTON !(IJP)4 former French naval aviator was injuredT critically Friday night when he tried to crash land his light plane on the busy Washington-Baltimore- 1 Parkway after running out of gas. The pilot, Philippe W. Aucken-thale- r, 30, of nearby Hyattsville, Md., was injt red when his j plane hit some power linejs, hit a bridge and crashed qm the highway. Allied Bombers (Continued from Page One) cast of a radio report from Cy- prus that Egypt was destroying the El Firdan bridge across the canal in further attempt to plug up the shortcut between East and West. Egyptian Claim The Egptians claimed they sank a British destroyer and troop carrier and damaged a third vessel of an invading fleet off the Port of Suez, at the southern end of the canal. Both the British and French denied an invasion had been attempted. The French said no vessels had been lost. Egypt claimed it had shot down a total of 57 British, French and Israeli planes since the attacks on Egypt started.. But the Allies acknowledged only a single loss of one fighter plane. As the British and French invasion schedule moved toward its climax, there were these other developments: Britain and France, rejected an appeal from the United Nations for an end to the- - Middle East fighting. . Press reports in Beirut said that Iraqi troops were moving into Jordan at the unanimous request of the Jordan cabinet and that Syria also had agreed to aid Jordan. In Moscow, President Kliment Voroshilov reiterated the Soviet Union's support of Egypt and the Arab world and offered Syria "necessary assistance to reinforce its complete national independence." The offer presumably could include military aid. h In Qatar on the Persian Gulf, Arabian reports said a pipeline was damaged by a time bomb and that Britain 'had moved in oil-ric- troops. A communique from the joint command on Cyprus said that and "British French pilots, the length and breadth searching off the country, have failed to find any but the most flimsy evidence that Egypt any longer has anything approaching an effective air force." h The forces have admitted their first air loss over Egypt, they said a Venom jet fighter failed; to pull out of a dive while participating in a dawn rocket and cannon raid on Egyp" tian military targets. As opposed to their own single loss, the British and French claim to have destroyed or damaged more than 120 Egyptian planes, j, The "Voice of Britain" radio station on Cyprus warned inhabitants' of Alexandria, Damanhur and Tanta that military targets there may be bombed after dusk. Damanhur is 40 miles from Alexandria, and Tanta is 74 miles avrayf Both are road and rail junctions on the main route to Cairo from Alexandria. British Defense Minister Antony Head told the House of Commons Saturday that at 5 a.m. PST "no h landings' had taken plaee in Egypt. The French Defense Ministry h said forces already .were assembling for a move to "Unblock" the j Suez Canal which it said the Egirptians bad "sabotaged" by the sinking of five i ships.. Anglo-Frenc- , , Aaglo-Frenc- Anglo-Frenc- j Im ski OAS tsll why they support Gsorgs D. Clyde lof governor DAVID LAWRENCG "fhh year, as we elect our political STOWE, Vt. v here-nearl- far-sight- ed 1 ia-Jujri- as i 1 .. have bfen a g RepubHcan; but have always re served my nght, as an American, to reiect a candidate whom I felt rooms" were tryjng to shoye down peop le "in smoke-fille- d my throat. Utizens, you and I watched, on television an open convention select a choice .for us in Geornp Clvd nnrJ Rmrlwi . . Lee. he citizens ot Utah then exercised their choice m d fair I Kfe-Ion- ..... 1 i wuiiwi. ",,v one special facet of this subject that ! should like to point out specifically. What about the future of our youth who would like to live at home? Mr. Clyde has effectively pointed out that Utah, in the past generation, has lost approximately 100,000 of her trained youth because there were not proper job opportunities' at home. If industrial development in Utah fe assured, provided we maintain in the state a favorable-climat- e for the launching of nev industries and the development of those already established here, there should be increased job opportunities for engineers, scientists, and skilled workers, and a more abundant life! for all under dynamic and sound leadership. This can be supplied under the Republican Party, with Mr. Clyde as its chief executive. He has a plan and a program. He Is able and fair; and he Is honest. There k one disturbing element. There was a time, a some of today's older generation can recall, when all of the peoples of Utah did not work together In unity and in harmony for our common good. I thought those old days were gone. But tone man, in a demonstration of selfishness and personal vindictive-- , nest seldom seen in an office which should be dignified and forward looking, k rying to disrupt the party to which he belonged. Without any chance of being elected himself, he it making doubly hard the election of a capable governor. I have confidence thqt most of the people of this state will look behind his high sounding phrases and recognize this personal destre for revenge which underlies his unfortunate action. rs win wwi To a man nj innus, u ywu ivier. i msi nw Tirsr cnorce m me prf--t with faith in the records and abi lilies of both candidates, being et loser is not too difficult. As one with a ,deep interest in the affairs of our state and with no political ajdvantage to be gained now or in the future I unhesitatingly urgje the election of George Dewey Clyde as Governor. I iave personally j known AAr. Clyde during the past two and a half years and; from this acquaintanceship, I have learned to admire, whqt he Is; and What he represents. He is: a straight thiroW, a loyal member of the church of his choice, a Christian gentleman, a man who dedicated a large part of his life to our younV-rouhis affHiotion greatestxcrturcrl iourte-rou- r with U.S.A.C. He h not fonceited? but cm able man wlo Is wiHIng to serve v all. George Is a cooperative and a friejndly man who iwrH bring credit and honor to .this state tf we jglve him the opportunity. This I sincerely believe. 1 ; gh His hgltlmaio a worthy man who H adeof Recreation in Sah quate for this present Lake Gityf He could probably, be to that postJ though he. is said to have considerable influence In the back stage management of our city, he cannot be blamed, I suppose, for its present financiaj condition. A good many other clty administrators find themselves In difficulty because they refuse to tailor, the! soft of services to the ctolfc of municipal tneome. opponent Is oner re-elect- CLYDE -- A MAN ed 'OF STATURE The charge against George D. Clyde of political Wk perience ;Is ridiculous. Political experience can be a liability. Our great President proved that a mind trained in devotion to America could Wn its attention to a new field ana as CHIEF- -. could assemble around itself devoted . men who, working as a team, could meet and eonqwer any problem. ' Clyde Is a man of stature.. He has lived in various parts of our stale. He knows the problems of all of us. On his recent challenge as a public servant, with the help of an inspired team, WILL ADD TEAf.1VORlC j are in a national and international Mr. Clyde knows the state 1 VOTERS CLYDE WILL AID YOUTH There s am very proud of the pari my grandfather took in building this great commonwealth. He came one hundred years ago and achieved a successful life through his owh industry, based UDon fair deafina with all men and respect for the beliefs and rights of others My father, George D. Keyser, and his brothersMalcolm and Paul did more than their share to be the ype of citizens of whom Utah has always been proud. A sense of man's duty to man would never let them shirk and because each did his best in his own way, I believe Utah is today a better place. Becpuse of this, with no rantor in my heart and with a deep sense of saaness, must turn my back upon J. Bracken Lee, who, in trum, deserted me first. This I owe to my five children that their Utah may be a happy, united and prosperous locality m wnten to grow. leaders for the state, Utah k going iv' through a crucial period of discovery and pioneering the discovery by industrial leaders of the nation that therefore in Utah matchless deposits of Iron, copper, phosphates, uranium, oil, gas anJjDther basic raw materials ready to be developed and utilized What is behind this sudden increased .interest in our natural wealth? Prospects of water and power. Without ample water and poweT our ore stays in the ground where it has been for ages. Now, for the first timeJhanks to the united efforts of many leaders Including George Clyde, Utah can see in its' future the possibility of the needed wafer and power to develop all of these resources. Remember, these clams are hot assured yet. There are appropriations neededtnd constant contacts to be made, to get our water and power. There are few, if any people fn the State of Utah, who have the knowledge, the experience and the background of George Cfyde in solving the water problems of the state and knowing how to get things done m Washington. We need a governor who can meet these problems. Mr. Clyde has solved them, and can solve them. He is the one candidate who can do it. r r OF-STAF- (UP)-Fo- ur young persons were killed Friday night, when their automobile left the the road and crashed head on into a: tree. Police identified three of - the dead, all from Barr, Vt., as Mary Lawrence, Jean Holmes, and Russell Leathers. The identity of the fourth victim was withheld pending notification of parents. Their ages ranged, " from 18 to 25. The driver of the auto,' Robert Boutin, 20, was taken to a nearby F. I mergency. War rs raging, right now. The next four years will require a leader in Utah 'who will support and work with President Eisenhower with all his heart. George Clyde k the only 'candidate for governor who will do this. In Vermont 1 ' But enough of that. We Four Killed JAMES KAY . (UP) Nearly 100 loudspeakers, tuned to a local radio station, blared forth rock n' t roll music in the post office here In a campaign Karachi j; capital of Pakistan, in- to "improveFriday personnel relations, creased its population 400 per cent morale and welfare" at noctal hospital suffering from internal la a ... iiveear period. and siuli&te tmeham , .ploy. II rtl ' of Defense announced the joint invasion forces were moving now to the tactical phase of "preparing the way to occupation of the Canal." (UP Radiotelephoto). i THRONGS CHEER NASSER Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser waves to cheering crowds in Cairo as he rides through the h streets Friday. The zero hour for invasion of the Suez Canal Zone appeared almost at hand. The French Ministry i 4 - 'i in , j 4 s 1 4... drove out of the store parkimr lot. i It was described" as havfng a white top and black bottom, with a yellow license plate bearing ; and its problems, and its natural resources, as does no other man now running for governor. He will work with our state and cooperate nationally. I believe we should elect George. Dewey Clyde for governor on November 6th. I am proud to support his candfdacy. jF, he brouaht uc svecees. ; X 4 - . hope, with eft my heart, that we avail ourselves of his abilities. . I JATvlGa.Fi EtGYGGR 1C40 TIIIItD AVCNU2 - CMl'Def. Adv. tr tWm Sv. ak BorHn VcqtaL, CO fta NORTH WAICOTT ;l ': Wlt F ' ...... 0 f t t .' ' 1 |