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Show 14 Freak Snowstorm Hits DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1957 Utah County, Utah mxtr t liniMi I lim imiliw iiiimi HI ! ... ijsmvvwssfwammmmmm 1 I j Hi - Climaxing an eventful year .at Lehi High School, awards and trophies .were presented to LEHI students achieving outstanding academic' and athletic goals. Awards presented were as fol- 5 1 11 Serious New Trouble in North Afri Complicating French Cabinet Crisis 1 ! s. WEYMOUTH, England (UP) A freak sandstorm lashed this South Coast seaside resort Monday night, with drifts up to 14 feet piling up in the downtown streets. A wind whipped up sand Irom the beaches and through the town. Firemen wearing goggles and masks poured millions of gallons of water onto the beach to prevent it from blowing away. A number of cars and trucks were buried under the sand drifts but there were no reports of Lehi Seniors Get Awards At Assembly British Sea Resort Foreign News Commentary "y-- '"LU" . ' 11 - i JJ ; V i mjr- - injurfies. lows: Garden Club Landscapes Lindon Chapel Hillman Awards: Ralph Haws, basketball player; outstanding Fred Worlton, outstanding track star. Cranmer Awards: Gaylen Lewis, outstanding tennis player; .Karl Ingram, outstanding football player. Honeyman Award: Craig outstanding forensic student. Peterson Award: Phyllis Price, outstanding thespian of the year. Future Farmer Awards: Keith Cedarstrom, Jay Richins and Gary Powell. Chris-tense- Lions Club Award: Lance Gud-mundse- II n, ' i ' ' ' , - - h ' n, I valedictorian. Athenian Club Award: Joyce Comben, for scholarship. Elks Club Awards: Craig Chris-tensescholarship; Lance - INDIAN CHILDREN RETURN HOME Lupeta and Houston Daniels, Hopi Indian children who have been living- in Lindon while" attending school, returned to their n, Gud-mundse- n, leadership. - School Song Contest Winners: Mrs. Dorothy Bone, first place; Mrs. Josephine Zimmerman, second place. home in Parker, Ariz., this week. 2 Hopi Indian Children Pep Club Award: Margaret Ann Webb, president of the Pepettes, presented a trophy to the school won by her organization at the Make Good Record While Living in Lindon Home BYU Invitational Meet. State Tennis Trophies: Gaylen Lewis, state singles champion, and Marlin Barnes and Joe Adam-son- , state doubles champions; presented their trophies to Principal Dan W. Peterson for the school trophy case. Principal Peterson also presented Lance Gudmundsen, retiring student body president, with a trophy in recognition of his work. Members of the respective ath-- 1 -- LINDON Members of the Lindon Garden Club have been at work this past week grooming the grounds of the Lindon LDS Ward House. Soil in all planting areas near the church building was spaded up and replaced by prepared loam and mulch, after which members planted petunias and varigated colius, with geraniums "'' and ageragum in the front entrance planter boxes. The club plans to finish trimming the shrubs and lawns as weather permits. Under Garden Club direction, members of the Junior Sunday School in the Lindon Wards planted beds near their classrooms with salvia and white petunias. The Garden Club encouraged them in this project in the hope that participation in the planting would stimulate the youngsters' interest in better care of the church grounds. Mrs. Robert H. Ostergaard, past president of the Garden Club, donated all plants used in the project. thinks that Lupeta will undoubt earn a scholarship. LINDON Lupeta and Houston edly Houston is greatly interested Daniels, Hopi Indian children in athletics and is quite skilful who have been living at the in The children learned Rhinoceros Held Long sports. Ralph Wigginton home in Lin- to swim in the Parker Dam Resdon this past school year, will To Be Milked ervoir near and Enough their home, leave by bus this evening to reare expert swimmers, with FRANKFURT, Germany (UP) turn to their home near the Hopi both e t i c organizations Houston being most remarkably Zoo officials aid today that for presented reservation in Parker, Ariz. at this sport. block "L" sterling silver belt the first time in history a rhinocIt was through the LDS Church adept buckle to Coaches Joe Cranmer Both Houston are and eros held still long enough to be Lupeta Welfare program that the and Dean Welch (football), Rus- Indian converts to LDS as the milked. Church, two children and their sponsors sell Hillman (basketball) and Dean of their are the other members The huge animals generally are were brought together. Lupeta, Prior (baseball and wrestling). the their but the Frankfurt parents being who is a sophomore at Pleasant family, most Jane Lott, Craig Christensen Grove converted. A rhino Zoo an had Lupeta recently advantage. School, and Houston, as and Bill Evans received awards in the High of served vice has Great the Catherine named president apparsixth grade at Lindon MIA for outstanding work in shorthand in the Lindon her class to was veterithe ently grateful Elementary School, came to Lin sec- narians who helped her and typewriting. through a don last August to make their Second Ward, and also as of her Sunday School serious illness. She became virturetary Scholarships to BYU were won home the Wiggingtons while by Dale Manning, Joyce Comben attending school. The children class. She is exceedingly proud ally tame and had no objections and Craig Christensen. Scholar-chip- s plan to return again for the next cf The Silver Gleaner award to being milked. The milk had a which she has earned just re butterfat content of .27 per cent to the University of Utah school year. Houston graduated Sun compared with 3 or 4 per cent for went to Lance Gudmundsen (Rotcently. a little homesick at Although from Primary and is now cow's milk. ary scholarship), Gary Powell and first for their six brothers and day of MIA age. Fred Worlton. the two made rapid adUtah State University scholar sisters, Their sponsors, Ralph and Vir Abraham Lincoln received his to the white man's justment are won to practice law in 1836. were license prominent oy iaie Manning. ways and have made innumer-Eandr- a ginia Wiggington, snips of Lindon members community, Peterson, Gaylon Lewis able Iriends in the Mr. Lindon and Gary Powell. CSU scholarship The number of going-awa-community. Wiggington being y parof Mrs. while the Justice went to Ralph Haws, and Phyl- ties Peace, them in Lindon honoring school for has lis Price won a scholarship to attest to that fact. Wiggington taught a of Both have number years. DareTg College of Beauty Cula great love and understanding Fine Training ture. A scholarship to Excelsis for children, and feel that the Both youngsters possess a shy, experience of taking these two TL a persunanLy tuat i inuai Indian youngsters into their Lance Gudmundsen was reeipi-- sweet winninKi and Mrg. wiggington home has been richly rewarding. ent of the annual Reader's Digest at they must have had says While many people in the valaward, and also a citation" and fine training at home, for they volume from the Danforth Foun- - Eeldom ley have sponsored Indian stuquarrel and are excep- -- dents, the Wiggingtons believe and untionallv few have taken more than that New student body officers were Srxlied. Most Indian children, sworn in at the beginning of the living closer to nature than white one at a time. Mrs. Wiggington assembly, and musical selections children, are more appreciative states that there are a vast were furnished by violinist Diane and more gentle in their natures, number of Indian children who need such help, and that anyone McMillan and the "Harmonettes." the Wiggingtons believe. interested in such sponsorship pomuax singing group in the punish can find more information by rarely parents Hapi scho their children, preferring to train the LDS Relief Society them by love and example, with contacting Child Welfare Department. DEAD LETTER OFFICE a reverent and respectable attiMail car- tude toward their elders and UNION, N.J. (UP) rier Albert Mueller is in trouble other's property an inherent HE'S CAUGHT SHORT with postal officials because he quality of their environment. MADISON, Wis. (UP) Bernard turned a cemetery into a dead According to their teachers, into 41, was hauled letter office. Crompton, stuboth children are excellent Postal inspectors investigating dents, very quick to learn and court on a drunkenness charge complaints that residents failed to unusually observant. Lupeta has Monday when police caught him running around Capital Square in receive expected letters found' made A's and B's in her his shorts. of mail in Hollywood jects and particularly enjoys Crompton told the judge he "was ing and LDS seminary classes. mile" Authorities said Mueller con- - She hopes to serve on a church trying to run a fcssed dumping the mail but mission, possibly to her own but didn't make it because he kept "only on days when it was too people. She'd also like to go to "getting stopped by policemen." and Mrs. Wiggington He forfeited $10 bail. college, heavy." By PATRICIA ALTON short-tempere- the rebels. It is estimated that the campaign will cost France one billion dollars this year. Morocco borders Algeria on the west. Tunisia borders Algeria on the east. Both Morocco and Tunisia are openly on the side of the Algerian rebels. Also, Tunisia lies between Algeria and Arab Libya. There is no doubt that th Algerian rebels are getting arms from Libya through Tunisia. Successive JP r e n c h premiers have vainly sought a solution of the Algerian problem which would give the country a grealpieasure of self-rul- e but would keep it as a part of France politically. The French cabinet situation is the diplomatic representatives in Washington of 11 Arab countries By CHARLES M. McCANN a formal request to SecreUnited Press Staff Correspondent made of State John Foster Dulles Serious new trouble in North tary aid to France be American that Africa is complicating the French suspended. cabinet crisis. This request was based on the While President Rene Coty is that France was guilty trying to find a premier to suc- allegation in its campaign ceed Guy Mollet, the relations be- of terrorism rebels in nationalist the tween France and its former pro- against tectorate of Tunisia are at the Algeria. The Algerian rebellion lies bebreaking point. hind most of France's present Last Tuesday the day Mollet was forced to resign after losing troubles. Relucjtantly partly due to Unita confidence vote in Parliament encouragement of "naFrance suspended payments on ed States movements all over the tionalist" its 35 million dollar a year aid world France independgranted program to Tunisia. to its protectorates of Tuence The reason was that the French Foreign News Commentary d, j believed that arms which it was sending to Tunisia were being relayed to the rebels in Algeria. Premier Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia responded by announcing that he regarded French-Tunisiaeconomic agreements as having been cancelled. OUTSTANDING Gcniel Hone, cited as outstanding Honor Bee in the Timpanogos Stake MIA. Special Award Geniel PLEASANT GROVE Hone, daugtiler of Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Hone of Pleasant Grove received a special award for be- ing "Timpanogos Stake Outstand-- ! ing Honor Bee of the MIA" for the year, at the Stake Swarm night Tuesday at the Timpanogos Stake House. The youn-- "Honor Bee" received 60 honor badges, largest number of badees awarded in the stake for several the years. Earning the badges required hours of work for each badge, There were 42 honor bees of the stake receiving certificates from Mrs. Rulon WelLs, Timpano gos Stake president. Mrs. Milton West is the leader of Miss Hone in the Pleasant Grove First Ward. Mrs. Preston Atwood is Timpanogos Stake leader. For No Time-Of- f Highway Patrol 4-D- Week-En- d ay S.ALT Utah superintendent LAKE CITY (UP Patrol Highway Lyle Hyatt said today no members of his staff would be given Memtime off during the four-da- y orial Day weekend but would be put on extra duty patrolling highways. Hyatt made the announcement in line with an expected heavy flow of traffic on the roads during the first major excursion of i Open Rebellion Continues Open rebellion broke out in AOther Aid Plans Sought lgeria on Nov. 1, 1954. This rebellion continues. France is using Bourguiba then started a series of conferences with the diplomatic nearly 500,000 troops in fighting envoys of the United States and other countries on the possibility Trial Resumed For they might give the aid France Conscientious refused. The United States was brought CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. more directly into the North Afri The court martial of Ma(UP can situation last Thursday, when rine Private Peter H. Green, 18, on charges of failing to draw his rifle from a supply sergeant last March 18 was scheduled to resume today. Trial of the young Evansville, S. L. Ind., serviceman was continued SALT LAKE CITY (UP) Bur- last week after Defense Attorney who entered by hacking their WiHiam Daubney moved for a glars way with a hand axe through a mistrial on grounds that a memglass-bric- k wall broke into the ber of the court had discussed the Moose Lodge here Sunday and case in public. Green reportedly refused an ortook $700 in cash from the club's der to draw his rifle because he safe. Police said after entry was gain- is a conscientious objector. ed into the building, burglars shattered two inside doors to gain ac- DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE a cess to the office. The dial and Columbus, Ohio up handle of the safe were knocked Judge let a witness take a juror off, then the outer steel sheet of out of a trial Monday. The juror, Robert Davis, 60, bethe door "peeled off" accordill during the trial and the came to ing police reports. witness, Dr. George Heer, took Davis to a hospital to remove his the summer season. He said the appendix. amount of traffic probably would increase sharply because of the Six thousand persons died in opening of fishing season and the the tornado and tidal wave that start of school vacations. struck Galveston, Texas, in 1900. j Burglars Loot Moose Lodge w-a- an French Parliament. Objector g 12 Algerian-Tunisian-Morocc- n Won by Girl in Pleasant Grove j so tangled that Paris dispatches nisia and Morocco in 1955. immost now suggest the only solution will Algeria, which is the portant of France's African pos- be to get Mollet back as premier. Whoever does get the job will sessions, remained as it had been a part of France itself political- inherit the ly, with representation in the headache. government s ! Singer Settles Damage Action LOS ANGELES (UP Singer Gordon MacRae has settled a $10,-00- 0 damage suit resulting from a traffic accident in December, reported NOT SO PRETTY TRENTON. N.J. (VP) Inflation hit larceny in New Jersey Monday. Gov. Robert B. Meyner signed a bill increasing the limit of petty larceny from $50 to $200. SEIBERLING TIRES Tire Recapping and Repair Electric and Motor Tune-U- p CLAYSON-RICHIN- 275 S. S GARAGE FR Univ. Ave. 3-1- 68 w j 1 well-behav- SO GOOD IT'S REMARKABLE ed sub-quantiti- "''' Ml J es typ-Cemcte- ry. j four-minu- j .'.'.ll.V! 'v a I ' te "VI 7. to-- 4oo& lor COWBOYS, INDIANS and SPACE CADETS! W L- mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm U- - -- p Whisky TO WEiLCOIVlE THE NEWCOMER tW moWi th new neighbors thir hom in your neighborhood. 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There's a Mutual of Enumclaw ogent in your neighborhood. Ask him about Fire, Automobile, or Comprehensive insurance. since v r-- da (Slut?! one neighbor tll another about this fme old insurance company famous for honesty and service mrgncy...thot makti best 4 on Insured Savings to make ho KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY 86 PROOF LOUISVILLE 1, KY. EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY Rtl. m TrQ $l coir finnmrfsn.joro- 1 - f 1 AUTO m COMMIMINSIV1 no MSMOn9Nti . . UNCI ltt on vvihiwq rcco II " 1' Hem wiTyf L ! .fcTPID-- it mutual Off 1955, but faces litigation on a $125,000 action brought by a woman involved in the crash. The settlement of a $10,000 suit, filed by Leonard Miller, 39, of Van Nuys, Calif., was announced Monday in Superior Court. The 'to have singer was to Miller $2,325. pay agreed Another case brought by Mrs. Marion Dunn, 38, was scheduled for trial Sept. 12. Miller charged MacRae with crashing into the back of his car, forcing it into an automotrile driven by Mrs. Dunn. W. 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