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Show - ; . J 1 - ' ; - v .? :; " ' v :" . ; - ' - ...';-' v-.- (. x. i' - .' . , I 1 ') . . fK v ;' - I ..'.r - 'V'.. " T y - , - - ; It- : - HAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY. JUNE 16. 1954 Utah County. UUh f - ; - . . ; .... .,,in...... i. nij n ; j , LMMUL.M.L!a!1ii1 " J r i: . - i, i. 3-- A , ( .."7 Smoot Heads Utah! Bankers Association SALT LAKE CITY. (UP) The Utah Bankers Association wrapped up its 46th annual convention in Salt Lake City yesterday by electing Wendell M. Smoot, Salt Lake City banker, as president for the coming year. Smoot, executive vice president of Zion's Savings Bank and Trust Co. succeeds Charles H. Dixon, Spanish Fork. t Richard H. Clark, cashier of the Davis County Bank. Farminjrton. was elected vice president and H. B. Crandall, president of First SJ State Bank, Salina, was retained as executive manager of the associa tion.; New members' elected to the ex ecutive committee were Arthur Gardner, Cedar City; F. C. Pack ard, Springville, and Ralph B. Wright. Salt Lake City. The association passed several resolutions at its closing session including one endorsing immediate construction of the upper Colorado river . storage project, including Echo Park, and another commend ing secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson on his farm program stand. -'-- ' M . SECOND WARD CHAPEL TO BE TORN DOWN The cornerstone of the old Second Ward LDS chapel, above,-wil- l be opened' Friday, at a celebration held to raise money for the tearing down of the structure. A social and recreation hall will be erected in its place. The late Lars L. Nelson, right, who was bishop of the ! ward for 27 years! was in office at the time ground was broken for the building on Feb. 10, 1908. j: Celeb ration to Note Razing Of Provo 2nd Ward Chapel JONES By A.' WILL . J i ' J - I . - i The' cornerstone of the building was laid Jan. 30, 1911, by President J. B. Keller, of Utah Stake. A paper containing history of the Second Ward was later added to the relics already placed there j' by Albert Jones. of j The work tearing down the structure will be done by a contractor instead-oward members for several reasons. First, j the hazards involved in tearing down a building of this size are too great for inexperienced help to risk.; Second, equipment would have to be rented for ward mem bers to do the work. Third, a con tractor would be able tp accom plish, the work in a shorter period of time, making it possible for construction of the new recreation hall ;to be well underway,-- by winter. Construction may, then continue through the winter months. : Quorums of the two wards will be in charge of serving and preparing the meal for the occasion; the Seventies, conces sions; and the High Priests and Senior Aaronic Priesthood mem bers, erecting and removing the stage, taking care of seating ar and setting rangements, up tables. Contributions for the razing of the chapel will be accepted, r ; celebration, featuring Ihe opening of the cornerstone of the eld Provo Second Ward chapel, will .take place jFriday at the chapel grounds at 6:30 p.m. Held moirey ta tear down the building, which is also being used by the Eleventh Ward, the event will include a program and a plate, luncheon. All West Utah Stake members are invited to the party, which will be under the; direction of the Priesthood Quorums of the two wards. Stake President J. Earl Lewis, Bishop Gerald, Stone, and Bishop Harrison Scott' will conduct the program. The chapel is being torn down to make room for; a social, and recreation hall, soon to be added to the west unit of the hew chapel, which is nearly completed. Ground was broken for erection of the building on Feb 10. 1908, when Lars L. Nelson, who served iwas bishop. chapel was dedicated on May 30, 2915, by Apostle Francis M. Ly A i ; ! ' for-27-yea- 1 The-Elder- The rs; man. . . Holds lii s . 11 1 By MICHAEL J. O'Neill United Press Staff Correspondent f 1 ! Hill rmmrn Air Rncow Crew of Nine t Fork on Highway 91 where the 1 Pilot Saved ing the British naval yacht Elinor and her crew of nine men. A brief announcement broadcast By Quick Action TOKYO (UP) Red China nounced today its army is hold 11 by Radio Peiping and monitored in Tokyo said the vessel, given to the navy for pleasure trips for sailors on leave at Hong Kong, "intruded into Chinese, territorial J( waters." - , f iand its the said boat Peiping crew were being "detained!' while an investigation is conducted by a coastal defense unit. The Elinor left Hong Kong June 1 on ai pleasure cruise, disappearing shortly after it left port. Peiping said the yacht was ;seized June 1 near Sanmen Island of KwangtungJ Province. British officials at Geneva had made inquiries about the iyacht, but no answer was give Chinese fishermen in Hong ,Kong said Monday they had seen a boat 'fitting the Elinor's description in Swatow, about 70 miles northeast - 'i ? . HILL AIR FORCE BASE. (UP) Quick action by ground crews at Hill Air Force Base yesterday was credited with saving the life of an Air Force pilot and his civilian 1 Crew 'chief. MAYOR'S WIFE, DAUGHTER UNDER OWN POWER MILWAUKEE! Wis. UPU The wife and daughter of Mayor Franl! Zeidler evacuated under their own power when the j national air alert was sounded, jlour j walked They utiles out of the board's findings until "later the ''heavy damage" rea to one of "little damage" between the this month." In briefs filed with the AEC last first siren and the time an week and also made public last was supposed to have hjit downtown I night, Oppenheimer's attorneys ar- Milwaukee. gued that the' board was wrong in citing lack of enthusiasm for the WELL PAID FOR t program as one reason for calling Oppenheimer a securi- PICTURE ASSIGNMENT ty risk. PHOENDC, Afiz. (IjJP) Jay Considers Him Loyal of the Phoenix Gazette Teller: said he considers Oppen Brashear picture-makin- g heimer a loyal American who was well paid for a would not willingly breach security assignment Tvcday. photographing ithe opening regulations. But because of his at- of While New Bank office?, Brashear and titude toward the a in the lobby. Then card signed he he other atomic issues, said, believes j "one would be wiser not there was a dra ing. He won a $1,000 door;prize. clearto him I 1 WASHINGTON "father of the jr (UP) b' The testified The pilot, Capt. Clyde Hartshorn B-2- 6 to a safe landing on a runway spread with slick, sudsy foamite alchemical used in fighting fires The civilian crew chief was ''Lew is S. Stevens of Murray. The 6 damaged its nose landing gear on takeoff from Hill shorts ly . before noon yesterday. Capt. Hartshorn circled the field for more than two hours using up ex cess fuel while Stevens worked to repair the landing gear, When Stevens' efforts . proved fruitless ground crews! went to of Hong Kong.! work with the foamite. The landing i i The fishermen fsaid they saw went off without a hitch Europeans paraded through' the Capt. Hartshorn is a test pilot at Hill ,AFB. streets under guard. tB-2- . . i j . : i i ri ;- ji I j IMPORTANT April 28 that theN dread weapon would have been developed four years earlier if Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer and others had given it "moral" support. But Dr. Edward Teller and others who pushed the program admitted that Oppenheimer finally showed enthusiasm for the project in the summer of 1951 after a startling discovery vastly increased the chances of success. , NEW DELHI, India (UP)The They made the statements in tesgovernment said French troops timony before a special Atomic grant security landed today at Pondicherry, one Energy Commission security board ance." settlements of the four tiny French which recently declared Oppen-- j Dr. I. I. Rabi, Columbia Univeralong the coast of India. heimer loyal but a security risk. sity professor and present chair(Official sources in Paris said The 992-paGeneral Advisory transcript of the man of the AEC50 policemen were landed to in was another of the 40 Committee, board made public hearings, by sure secitnty and order in view witnesses who appeared before the of mounting agitation, for the in the AEC Tuesday night, also disclosed directhat the former special panel. He took sharp issue staff corporation of the territories into tor of the House-Senat- e with Teller's views. Atomic India.) which Energy Committee charged in a He said the committee, India filed an immediate protest letter 1949 when in headed to Oppenheimer FBI the last November with the French Embassy here de- that the ' a the to a head came issue famed was scientist manding that the troops be with- probable "agent of the Soviet opposed only a "crash program' drawn at once. on that "could have Officials warned that India may Union" who had "at least one beensomething impossible." alt6gether Communist mistress." have to take steps "to protect its Criticized Device Never Made interests. In fact, he said, the Based On Long Study An Indian spokesman said the Oppenheimer was criticized gadget William L- - Borden, an aide to for opposing troops were French and "Eurothen "has never been the late Sen. Brien McMahon presumamy foreign pean and made never, will" probably under command of said he based his charge and "we still don't know to this gionnaires French officers. He said they on long study of the case but Board day whether something like that brought military arms, ammuni Chairman Gordon Gray said he will function." tion and equipment ashore .with and his colleagues could find no Former AEC chairman Gordon them. evidence to support it. Dean testified that Oppenheimer The Indian government demand now appears clear that the "expressed enthusiasm for and It ed immediate withdrawal of the letter was one of the reaons to help" the to went why pains j"great French troops "in the interest of President Eisenhower program after atomic personally a peaceful settlement" of the ques- ordered- the spring of 1951 gave in tests suspended Oppenheimer) tion of French settlements on the as an AEC consultant last the great new promise. program year Indian subcontinent. backed him up on and witnesses a between Other "blank wall" Franco-India- n tension has in- him placed ; atom secrets. this. and creased since talks broke down in Dean also declared he knew of Paris earlier this month on India's The commission said it released "no instance" when Oppenheimer demand for incorporating Pondi- the hearing transcript because ever discouraged other scientists cherry and the other three terri attorneys had pub- from contributing to the program tories into the. Indian union. The some documents and "wide after President Truman ordered other three are Yanam, Karikal lished national interest" made it inevit- development to proceed on and Mahe.able. It said it would not act on a priority basis in January. 1950. PUMP ADVICE A CHAMPAIGN, HI., (UP) University of Illinois expert says their-immedia- te H-bo- $15.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS COTTON MATTRESS Guy H-bo- India Protests Embarkation Of French Troops NOTICE OVERMAN'S MATTRESS & UPHOLSTERY CO. has not moved. We are still at same address, 346 Wests Center, Guy Overman owner and manager. Do not confuse: us with out of town competition with same name. Our mattresses are manufactured here in Provo. You have no salesman commission to pay by buying from Guy Overman. A-bo- 346 West & 49.95 Overman's Mattress Upholstery Company! 198I-- . H-bo- ', i-- e- (D-Con- n), Mi kg PUT QH1 H-bo- H-bo- - ; i Alert: Readers BIGGEST I Know That The Communityf s MARKET PLACE is the CLASSIFIED COLUMNS of THIS NEWSPAPER! rural residents can guard against one cause of water pump failure during a fire by providing a sepa As rate power line to the pump, re ducing the danger of wires being burnt by flames. mm as yoyr phom Herald DBiipeeissv mm - kit OTdMI JMMC l r; t ,?Nkv - i : 1 jr . . ; ' 'r ! : '.111 ; y "Tijm -; Whether you're buying, selling, renting, hiring, looking for A potential deal work, or looking for a good used car low cost awaits you at the other, end of ja POVNDTOI ... v i - . - small-spac- e, Classified Ad. GET RESULTS QUICKLY! The action packed Classified Ad Department of this newspaper is as near to you as your phone. , II, i ' - LOW i O J Allirif UUllll IN COST1, IM IIM DCCIIITCI ltJULU mmmmmm o ' M . lit o . HIV o "J.,. Ct'.i: .i.r: rM I fl Ik fa - I? L wk I' . Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis are their i usual zany 'selves in their newest Paramount hit. "Living It Up. Janet Leigh plays the feminine lead in the ' Technicolor musical comedy, filmization of uie Broadway hit, "Hazel Flagg." Norman Taurog directed the film and Paul Jones produced. INC. ! Prev Logon y . OFFICES IN . ! Or20ffi ol ef The DOWN . SCREWBALLS, W Herald Want Ads For Results ge ! ' up up & Phon Cenler-Pro- vo & H-bo- j of Ogden, skidded his crippled 1 : H-bo- an- road is being improved and widened. The construction work creates a bit of Inconvenience now. but. completion of the project will be a big boon to motorists later on. Oppenheimer Held Bomb Development Up 4 Years i to-ra- tse DUSTY TRAFFIC JAM The scene above represents a common occurrence these days at the curve north of American Annivcrtory Yor Ads Clissified MM My Pric Soft Led Cfef 161 West Center St. Provo Mn 9 495 |