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Show i ! 1 i ? " " ' " ' ' ' ' ' '' ' 1 '' ' '' HERALD PHONES 1.3 ; i Orem Office ..... - AC $ 03 FR Provo Offices ...i I jFor - Advertising, News and Circulation FR Provo Society .1 'New Herald Building Located at 4th North & 2nd West 3-5- CLOUDY ''''''' I ' 84 I SEVENTY-SECON- showers through Tuesday. afternoon temperatures. High today 50. High Tuesday 45. Low tonight 32. 'Lower '' PROVO, UTAH COUNT?, UTAH, YEAR, NO. 225 D wilh ' i ! s fW77 MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1958 PRICE FIVE CENTS j LTD m ustained To 2000 Still Homeless In Igh Posts at Coast Flood Conference t tmmmm ' vyL if 1 Plane Noses Into Field 1 A I ' " -- X X' 12 Persons Dead; v 4 . CSsY.1 Sunny Skies 4 -4 By UNITED PRESS Latter-da- y Saints Church sustained four new appoint- Ease Danger ments to its General Authorities here Eastfer Sunday as SAN FRANCIS CO (UP) the 128th annual general conference drew to a close. returned to Hugh' B. Brown was elevated to the Council of the Sunny skies Twelve Apostles, replacing the late Dr. Adam S. Bennion. California Northernto and Central alleviate the today Brown formerly was an assistant to the council. of storm-battere- Gordon And 1 Ex-Provo- 2 Provoqris 1 1 Among New Author ities Oscar A. second . - j newly-sust- ained to m 1946-195- 0. - st 1 i 1 t ; ' jy -- -- C. c' ) a(" r; r e , 5Pey g Js (O -- . itj?'-- . 17-ye- ar More Good News Forecasters had other good news. The low pressure center of the past week moved over the mountains into ' "i the desert. SCENE OF DEATH AND And the storm pattern appeared Wreckage death. Crash took place 300 feet short o runway. The to be changing in the Gulf of four-engine of airliner which crashed near Tri-Cit- y $1,250,000 British-mad- e plane burst into flames as it Alaska so that new storms develAirport at Saginaw, Mich., carrying 47. persons to their hit the ground. (U.P. Telephoto). oped there will move inland to the north of California, forecaster W. J. Denny said. "This would mean considerable shorter periods of rain and less rain fromj each storm," Denny sf'id. The weather change came at a time when all dams and reservoirs in the Central Valley River the President himself, oppose eerioUs inflationary spiral, in 1959 and bigger antirecession and By MERRIMAN SMITH system were brim full and addiin public or 1960. sharp step-up- s tional promoting schemes. heavy rains threatened United Press Staff Correspondent some WoiXs One high official has said this congres- by flood disaster. The swollen San proposed clemc 9nti w,ot Gov- eional WASHINGTON , (UP) sev- and labor into Democrats be translated may floodvview new ; caused River Joaquin us far" Take the big si.800,000.-- , ernment officials said, today it jeral. major vetoes by the chief ing today,1 but mostly over farm will be weeks and in some cases groups. n- THese advisers, stui confident executive Oetore the end of the nignway am passw uy lands. Other streams receded be- months before anti - recession of a business upturn by the end 1958 congressional session. This gress jusi oeiore n quu iasi low danger levels. moves by Congress and the Ad- of this year at the latest, fear a was based on the assumption that Tnursday for a Easter The weather forecast was hope- ministration have an to be While still appreciable business boost coupled with the Congress will return from its holiday. signed ful only showers were predict- effect on the economy. measure the the DODular of new recess by fired bv federal heavv Easter President, impact ed for today; But more than 100,-00- 0 With Congress in recess, offi- spending would touch off another j demand to push through more might seem to promise a prompt acres of fertile farmland lay cials were transfusion to the economy and working overtime to under water, 2,000 persons still translate the flood of anti-slufor the unemployed. jobs were homeless and 12 were dead measures into government conNot so simple, say federal exin the last of a series of disasuland ordere tracts, purchase perts. They estimate a time lag trous spring rain storms. Proper- timately jobs. ; ofJJJ months to two years from ty damage in the last week alone administration of a big interstate highway But experts origihv key was estimated at more than 12 interviewed by thei United Press pioject to placement of contracts. million dollars. no or little Bad weather and the need to assaid there is apparent n effect yet except for a possible semble equipment and a work force may make this even longer. psychological gain. "A national economy as cumof Heber City early Sunday. Six By UNITED PRESS Interstate Program Slow bersome and complex; as ours v durin died hurt. FojLkr were Utah persons persons cannot be turned on a dime," Dir. 22 Experts to Tell How to "A highway program is probaA old Box Elder CounGabriel Hauge, President Eisen- ing the weekend as a result of Attract Tourists to Utah of the poorest places one traffic accidents, raising the death ty man died at Ogden of injuries bly economic adviser hower's 3 special known for creation of relatively Valley toll for 1958 to 33. suffered in a two car collision at has said. Arnold Palmer Wins Masters Three young persons died in Plymouth, Box Elder Coun t y, quick employment," - one federal and economists Government 6 Golf Tourney authority said. the smashed wreckage of two March 29. staffs of several top private re- cars one and one Five Children Killed Atop half miles north Building of state roads or imCleatus Wayne- Lee, 20; Billy ... 2 search organizations. such as the Railroad Trestle Joe Long, 17, both of Heber, and provement of existing highways Central Utah News 3, 4, 5, 8 Committee for Economic? DevelopJudith Turnbbwv 17, Orem, were could be begun much faster than ment and the National i Planning Classified 12, 13 killed when a southbound car new 'arterial highways, officials Association agree the impact of 10 Comics driven by Lee went out of con- said. They said the interstate works projects public major 11 Editorial Page g, trol and skidded sideways into road program, while or not be for a felt would year 14 News World 12, ' 2, a National, pickup the path of another car, accord- may however stimulate , more. 4 Obituaries in machines industries supplying n Rasmue-seto ing Trooper James 9 Society One Reason .For Opposition of the Utah Highway Patrol. and material for highways. 6, 7 Sports Federal housing officials exSheriff Floyd Witt of Wasatch That is one reason key Admin4 Stocks County said the mishap occurred pressed confidence ' the governistration advisers, and apparent- along a stretch of road on which ment's program to speed housing 15 persons have been killed in 10 construction has translated itself WASHINGTON (UP) Secre- years. into new jobs. But they had no h in tary of Labor James P. Mitchell Lee the car figures to back this up nor could were Injured a to predicts government report Larry Long, 17," Heber City, who tiiey estimate its effect on overall be released Tuesday will show suffered a skull fracture; Keith employment. employment rose in March and Perrenoud, j 19, Salt Lake City, j As for government moves to "unemployment didn't change who suffered undetermined injur- speed up buying programs and much From February." ies, and Neal Johnson, 19, Heber defense spending, a key Adminis"This to me is a heartening City, who suffered a skull frac- tration official said he could not ture and was listed in "critical" truthfully say even these had sign," She said. condition at St. Marks Hospital been translated into jobs yet.i He Unemployment in February to- :n Salt Lake City said this process also "takes taled S, 173,000. Labor Department of Driver was second the car tjme." officials have forecast that TuesRulon 'A. Lambert, 16, of Kamas. ( V V inday's ieport wilj show some lacerations.) Two pascrease over that figure, but not He suffered in his ' Anfi - Recession Moves Require Time To Give Etonomy Shot - in - the - Arm job-furth- er j j . ; j 10-d- ay i mp Qrem Girl, 2 Heber Boys Die in Head-OAccident HERALD INDEX 67-ye- ar - ! Report To ! slow-movin- Show Rise of I j j . Empl oyment ' I ;'.!' 11 - A MIDLAND, Mich. (UP) ft Capital Airlines Viscount landing on instruments in a light snow storm crashed short of the run-- , way at Tri-CitAirport Sunday all 47 aboard!. night, killing Searchers who returned to a muddy cornfield at dawn today found the last of thej dismembered and. 1 burned bodies. Civil Aeronautics Board and Civil Aeronautics Administration inspectors and engineers converged on the scene to try i.nd find out why the "million mile.l' veteran pilot landed morje rain-produci- counselor in the First Presidency, 4 presented the new appointments, at the concluding session, of the and all other General Authorities 128th annual conference Sunday and officials of auxiliary organiresi- zations, for unanimous sustaining aje Prpvoans or fofmef f vote. dents of this city. YMMIA Change They are Hugh B. Kiown, apostle; j Henry D. Clark announced that the presto the assistant named ent superintendency of the Young Taylor, Council of Twelve, and Jdseph T. Men's Mutual Improvement Assn. Bentley, appointed general super- was released as of the June conintendent of the Young Men's ference and a new superintendency Mutual Improvement Association. would be built around Joseph T. Elder "Brown, who has been Bentley, assistant to the president serving as an assistant to the of Brigham Young University. Un6 Twelve since October, 1953, was til a few months ago Bentley I a resident of Provo while he was headed the Mexican Mission. His professor of religion and coordi- assistants will be chosen later. President David O. McKay pre! natorr of veterans affairs at Brig-hasided over sessions of the 128th Young University One of his children, Mary Brown conference, which he closed on a I Firmage, wife of tdwin R. Fir- - note of spirituality in everyday l mage, has been a Provo resident life as well as Sunday. for many years. "True religion cannot be worn Lived in Canada on Sundays. . ." he said. "True i Elder Brown, who fills a va spirituality must be expressed in cancy in the Council of Twelve all our daily activities." In other addresses during the .that resulted from the death of final a native of day, Stephen L. Richards, Adam S. Bennion, is in the First Prescounselor first Salt Lake City wrjere he was a decline in authorsaid I born Oct. 24, 1883. The family idency, moved to Canada when he was ity of the father as head of the I 15. He studied taw and practiced family has been accompanied by in juvenile delinf law in Lethbridge, Alberta, Can- - an increase I ad a, until he moved to Salt Lake quency. He urged the situation be repaired. City in 1927. 1 He married Zina Young Card Marry Own Creed in the Salt Lake Temple June 17, Mark E. Petersen of the Coun1908. He served as a missionary cil of Twelve' Apostles urged that j and later as mission president in LDS members marry within their Great. Britain, and filled numer- - own creed and that they be united !;our positions of trust in the in temple ceremonies. i church. Marion D. Hanks of the First He left BYU in 1950 to become Council of the Seventy stressed i; J. legal adviser for an oil firm with the importance of good parental headquarters in Edmonton, Al- -l example in instructing children. berta,: Canada. At the time he Thorpe B. Isaacson, first counI was called in 1953 to be a geni- selor in the Presiding Bishopric, i; eral authority of the church he urged members to take a revitaljfwas president and "manager of ized interest in their religion for if the Richland Oil development "it will give a higher knowledge and more to liv? for and more Company of Canada. I New Assignment to die for than any other church " to Marion G. Romhey of the CounElder Taylor, new assistant cil! of Twelve Apostles warned I the Twelve, resided in Provo all Ihis life until he was called in that destruction could visit the (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on Page Four) Three of five persons sustained to major LDS Church positions By Runway The Kirkham. J. Reuben Clark Jr., . danger B. Hinckley, president of East Mill Creek Stake in Salt Lake City who is also executive secretary of the Church Mission Committee, and Henry D. Taylor, president of the California Mis-'s:o- n at Los Angeles, were named assistants to the council. They 'replaced Brown and the late Thomas E. McKay. Albert Theodore Tuttle was appointed to the First Council of Ihe Seventy, replacing the late on - Bursts Into Flames As Landing by Instruments Fails f d further flooding. weather bureau forecast fair weather for the region today and tonight as officials reported more than 100,000 acres of fertile farmland under water, 2,000 persons still homeless and 12 persons dead in the past week's dis astrous spring rain storms. Property damage alone was estimated at more than 12 million dollars. - 'v ' - ' ' ! - I j - wn ; VI vV. nore than another In a recorded radio interview with Rep. Kenneth B. Keating Mitchell said he expected a downturn in unemployment J this spring. Two big nongovernment organizations meantime called for tax cuts as the fastest way to, halt the recession. The National Planning Assn. recommended tax slashes adding up to 17,300,000,000. - It urged wiping out ,$4,500,000,000 in World War II excise (sales), taxes and (R-N.Y- i i 'I I ;? $2800,000,000 ! . .), , i , 200,000. :! in Individual income TheJCouncil of Stat' Chambers off Qxramerce urged "wise" tax cuts to encourage business investment. lit said a massive federal i spending program would lead to further inflation without raising - AUTHORITIES POSE WITH- McKAY Pres. avid O. McKay, center, of the LDS Church poses with four new appointees to high church positions, sustained t Sunday afternoon session of 128th annual conference. in From left are Albert T. Tuttle, named to First Council of Seventy; Gordon B. Hinckley, assistant to. the Council of Twelve; Hugh B. Brown, apostle; and Henry D. Taylor, assistant to the Twelve, (U.P. Telephoto). 1 public confidence in the economy. The AFL-CIand the . Commit tee for Ecorwmic, Development have also come out for congres sional action to lower taxes. O , sengers car, Lynn Leavitt. and Kacas, Betty White, 17, Kamas, suffered bruises or lac'j erations. At Dee Memorial Hospital fn Ogden, John Frank Archibald, 67, died Saturday night of injuries suffered March 29. Trooper Ralph Kotter of- the Utah Highway Patrol said Archibald drove onto Uj S. Highway 191 from aside road in Plymouth and his car was hit by a vehicle carrying Mr. and Mrs. Ira p. Patham, Kellogg, Idaho, both of whom suffered minor, injury.'.' .. Archibald suffered a mangled left arm and other fractures, ; Both cars were demolished. '! A year ago today Utah's highway death toll! stood at 42. Miss Turabow was born 'June 3,: 1940, in Murray, a daughter of LkVeri F. and Reva Eileen Lazenby Turnbow. She was a senior at the Orem High School ; at thie time of her death, Before moving to Orem with than a third oif a mile short of the runway. The inspectors said Pilot William J. (Joe) Hull, 44, either could have misjudged his approach or the 'plane could ha v crashed because' of a power or instrument failure. Fred G. Powell, CAB invest!- -' gator- - in- - charge from Chicago, said H might be a week beforb , . any solid conclusion could bo reached on the cause of th crash. Engines Deep In Mud The plane ijosed into a field where rescuers sank ankle deep in the mud to bring out the laipt three bodies. Powell said th plane's four engines were embedded deep in the mud. Powell said Hull appeared to bo in direct line jwith the southwest- - runway, He said A B. Hallman, engine specialist and erigineer0 Jajk CAB in washing" wkn j jAtt arriving today, would start tearing down the plane Tuesday. Ten other CAB and CAA investigators were on the scene.. Powell said .Hull had made one of his routine radio contacts with y the Capital office at airminutes before port just three the crash and all was well The $1,260,000 British - made ; plane burst iinto flames the in- -' stant it touched the ground and' firemen had to string hoses more than a thousand feet through,, a quagmire of mud to reach the scat- tered and burning wreckage. The plane was carrying a capacity load of 44 passengers returning home from Easter holiday top", j Tri-Cit- j i trips.'" It was the (first major commercial air disaster in "Michigan. By 3:45 a.m., 44 bodies had been carried to a temporary morgue set up in a private hangar. State poliice began trying to identify the bodies,- under supervision of coroners William Shea and Harold Cederberg. The! crew members were Capt. William Joseph (Joe) Hull, 495 Ridgewood Blvd., Westwood, N.J. a veteran Capital pilot; First Ofj - ficer r Earl M. Binckley, co-pil- ot 24 Moss Lane, Levittovtn, N. Y.; alid hostess Ruth Benecke, 27, East Aurora, j N.Y., a native iolS 27, Michi. Jfckspn, Johi New Weiss! York, . vice president in charge of the advancement; of education for the Ford Foundation, was aboard the Names of some aboard plane,1 were withheld Until relatives were j notified. '.- Capital said it was the airline's (Continued on Page Four) ; Costello Denaturalization Case Dismissed by Top Court 16. ".. ) - ; 1 j ! . j (Continued on Page Four) r. j 1 j WASHINGTON (UP) The Supreme Court today ordered of the government's - old denaturalization case against New York gambler Frank dis-miss- al five-ye- ar Costello. The court acted in a brief order oa three cases which raised the The order said the government must .file an "affidavit of good ieiuse" in denaturalization cases a( the same ' time it files the complaint in court, i jCostello, 66, is now before the Second U." S. Circuit Court of Appeals in' another case involving income tax evasion. He started sentence for serving a freed was that but pending apnea proceedings. The other cases acted on today concerned ; Gaetano Lucchese, 58. j . five-yea- r, t an Italian, naturalized in Newark, NJf.; and James J. Matlesr Nw York, director! rf organization for the united electrical workers Costello had appealed both the income tax And denaturalization cases on' grounds that wire-tja-p evidence had been used agaiist him. 1 But thisi issue was I not (iy. nvolved in the, court's action to-da- ' ' '' ' ,. .7. ;.. j !'' '.. Both ca ses have been delayed pending the outcome of a test wiretap case decided by t!s.' S preme Court Dec. 9, 195?. In that key decision the court ruled that Wiretap evidence obtained by state officials is not admissible in k federal trial because to make public such jnlor-ruitio- n is a violation of th e Ted- era4 Communications Act of 1934. i . . |