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Show WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18. 1958 Utah County, Utah I DAILY HERALD Around and About K ' UTAH COUNTY Dismissed Hospital Manager Defended si :- X Idaho (UPI) The loperintendent, of State Hospital South Vaid Tuesday Business Manager Eugene' G. Boyd, who was firi last week, saved the institution thousands of dollars while he was there. Dr. S. Wayne Smith said Boyd saed the hospital five to ten thousand dollars on the process ing of hogs raised on the institution's farm and consumed here. He said the hogs had been butch: ered and cured in Blackfoot before 'Boyd joined the staff in April, 1957, but under the new BLACKFOOT, By ROSALIE H. WILDE FR 47 iuu, iutsi acn n u mcu aiiv w-- " Sunset, were weekend guests of Mrs. Worthen's mother, Mrs. I virile her parents vacation in the Hawaiian Islands later this - month. Mrs. T. C. Larion has as her guest, her granddaughter. ijoan Kartehner, of Palo Alto, CW. Mrs. Elma Hampshire Orem, 'was hostess at a party at- tended by. Mrs. John Morley, Mrs. Walter Willis, Mrs. Jean Mrs. Sites for State Park at Scofield Being Considered -- Scott, Mrs.Orissa Celventra, Mrs. Thelm Millie Ridge, and Mrs. Amanda Jones. Sorensen, Mra. Keith (Elaine) Fielding and children Barbara, Rus. Dntri.i. fmm ffwsnfl. f!Hf.. IT VLsitinC With MrS. Fielding's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Bullock. Mr. Fielding expects to join his family here in two weeks. call onH ' Mr. Mrs. N. B. Jensen . and her daughter and to a from have returned frip plane and Mr. W, E. Childs, Glendlve, Mont. son-in-la- ; A family reunion for the descendants of Thomas Carter, Nephi, will be held Sunday, June 29, at 1 p.m. in Pioneer Park, Provo. Each family is asked to bring Its own lunch. - Kenneth Mathews, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Math- lxif.Vl Vlic aunf anH linflo Ai?c ia - ' T,n Rap "e in" Vellnwttnno and Stanford Mathews. t.rit-i-- l , e . . Mr. and Mrs. Howard Schoell left recently for Miami, Fla., to attend the Order of Railway Conductors and Brake-me- n Convention which will be held there the latter part of June. Mr.. Schoell is a national delegate from Division 252. Mrs. Bob Stockdale, Orem, has received word- of the death of her uncle, Steve Prince, Rupert, Ida-- , formerly of Monroe; Utah. Another" niece, Mrs. Catherine Casey, and a nephew, Jack Lloyd, are among the survivors. - ' 9 Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Robertson of Orem, have returned from a four-da- y stay at Bryce Canyon Lodge where they at- tended the annual Utah Pharmacy convention. was elected historian of the Utah Phar- -' macy Association Auxiliary for the year 1958-5Mrs.-Robertso- ' 9. ""Ll m "' Provo welcomes newcomers Mr. and Mrs. James L. Porter, 177 E. 4th N., and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Butler, 69 W. 2nd S., T . ; all from Payson; Mr. and Mrs. LaMar Warnick, Wyview Vil-- ; lage 212. from Holbrook, Ariz.;. Mrs. Kathryn Duncan, 488 E. 5th N., from Santa Rosa, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Dayle Rust, 38; E. 3rd N., from Nevada and Mrs. Nora Hall, 769 Timp Way, from Kansas. Also new to Provo are Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon N. Ras-- . muson, 378 N. 1st E., from Eureka; Mr. and Mrs.-LeSwitzer, 1st N., from North Dakota; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hol- -, ;73 E. 65 W. 8th N., from Pocatello, Ida.; Mr. and Mrs. John ?brook, H. Mabey248 N. 2nd E., from Globe, Ariz., and Garth Ferrel 678 N. 5th E., from Orem. The Senate, Tuesday passed a "moderate" labor reform bill designed to crack down on labor racketeers by safeguarding union funds, anown guaranteeing secret elections and promoting otner aemocranc topractices,Sen. right, here are the men who led the fight for the bill's passage: Left leader: Senate Renublican Knowland Irving Ives (R. N.Y.), F Sen. Lyndon John- and Sen. John Kennedy (D. Ma3S.), son, (JJ. lex.; senate majority ieauer. vujtx iciepnuw;. GOOD JOB DONE Wil-l?H- (R-Calif.- co-spons- or; 5 Passes Senate, 88-- 1 Idaho Falls Now Await Sentence Bill (Continued from Page One) passage by the Senate would spur a reluctant House to act on the measure this year. The bill, aimed at ending abuses turned up by the Senate , Rackets Committee, was sent to the House Tuesday night after five days of debate with the blessing of Democratic leaders, the administration and Senate GOP leader William F. 88-- 1 labor-manageme- Knowland who had sought a - Park. The spans are to be built on the park's grand loop highway and south entrance highway over Upper Gibbon, Lower Gibbon and Lewis Rivers. stiff-e- r .), POINT - f.) ." ce OF THE MOUNTAIN Johnson, president of the company, said the station, the firt in Pocatello, could ber in operation in three or four rnontlis. after approval of its permit n by the Federal CommuAn nications Commission. POCATELLO, Idaho (UPI) office building in downtown Pocatello has been getting free electricity for possibly 30 years, chagrined power , company officials discovered Tuesday. e 0QQ0 FREE SPREADER ROLLER CLAYSON-RICHIN- and S PET and GARDEN SHOP Provo 275 S. Univ. Ave. Western's the wonderful way to Inmate crews at Utah (UPI) State Prison will be trailed as emergency fire fighters this summer. Warden Marcell Graham said federal and state forest service personnel would conduct the train- LOS AM ing, The courses will last two days for each small group. Frst priority will be men from the prison's honor camp at Camp Wil- Choose from 6 departures daily, featuring Western's Champagne Flights. Orchids, gourmet dining, the. wortderful way to Los Angeles. liams., A similar program was taught last year and personnel who have already received instruction will take a refresher course. Salt take? Travel Agent or sea your Western Call Elgin aasGaae A. 61, J Shawmut was the original name pf BostQnr Mass. GOOD THINGS CAN'T LAST FOREVER STORE NOT GOING AYS bill, predicted the committee will not act on union-contr- D. Howard Fire Fighters In Utah , tougher ing, chain. Trained as Emergency Five former Idaho Falls police officers and two civilians, who pleaded guilty Saturday to first degree burglary charges, todpy awaited sentence on June 28. In the interim, a investigation was being made. District Judge Hugh A. Baker received the guilty pleas from former officers Lt. Marvin Jorgensen and patrolmen Reno Barbisan, Joseph Moser, William Decker and Don H. Jenkins.' Guilty pleas also were entered by Don War-di-e and Robert Windsor. Seven officers were accused of looting business places while on night duty. Former patrolman Le Roy Fowler previously pleaded guilty and was sentenced to not more than five years in state prison. Former officer John Crook who is facing a similar charge, has still to appear for preliminary hearings. pre-senten- nt (D-N.C- Quotes In the News - Prison Inmates to Be In Ex-Offic- ers IDAHO FALLS (UPI) -- gift-getti- m co-spons- or; e (R-Cali- - POCATELLO, Idaho (UPI) The U.S. Bu- Plans Tor establishing a, televisin DENVER (UPI) reau of Public Roads will open station here- were outlined Tuesbids here June 27 for three day by an executive of KBLI, bridges in Yellowstone National Inc., a Salt Lake City broadcast- j V. Labor Reform He sent two employes out Tuesday frith signs . reading, "Our a competition doesn't like usV Brown whom to .rivals reference claims are behind a union j six-offic- measure. House Democratic leaders had no immediate comment. They to confer soon were expected ' with Rep. Graham Barden chairman of the House Labor Committee who has been re" Strip hotel Las Vegas 3 days, 2 nites, including cocktails, luctant to act on any labor legisdinner and entertainment, $19.75. Chris topherson Travel, lation in an election year. i ; JR Barden told United Press International he had not read the Senate bill and "could guess the weather with as much accuracy" as the outlook for the measure in his committee. By United Press International Rep. Ralph W. Gwinn (RO-Yfrom time o time. Frankly, I WASHINGTON Rep. Charles don t like to receive them I pre- senior GOP member of the com8. Gubser mittee and advocate of a much after ex- fer to buy my suit ready-madelie at "obvious pressing dismay !glee" which he said newsmen OTTAWA John Reitnian, ahowed at the diffigrand-uncl- e of Jqel culties of Presidential Aide Sherto heir a Reitman, chain' man Adams: store "There is no greater group of fortune, after the child had been freeloaders' in the world than the found unharmed after his abduction: press." rne press was terrific. No Gov. Rob- body broke the release and noTRENTON, N.J. body bothered us too much. They ert B. Meyner of New Jersey, wereunderstanding. They after revealing that he received were verywonderful." just a bolt of cloth at the 1955 governors', conference in Chicago, but didn't know whether it came front Boston industrialist Bernard ; were now cured at the ) hospital. was dismissed Thursday Boyd for setting up a special hospital bank account instead of routing the buying of supplies through the state purchasing agent, policy CenA check of the SCOFIELD (UPI) Two possible sites near Scofield were examined tral Building's wiring system showtoday for a proposed new state ed that, sometime' in the past, pari of the wiring had been park. Francis Oswald, landscape ar- placed so it bypassed a meter. chitect for the State Parks Com Officials said they weren't sure mission, inspected sites at Eccles how to solve the problem. Canyon, between Cle?r Creek and (UPI) Wyo. CHEYENNE, Scofield, and Fish Creek Canyon When pickets from two unions near Scofield Dam. The year-roun- d recreation area appeared in front of the Town would offer water and other out- and Country Supermarket just door sports and camping activities south of here, store owner Rusaccording to directof EK. Olsen sell Brown began picketing the of the Parks Commission. pickets. . w, m m NTERMOUNTAIN BRIEFS ol OUT OF BUSINESS .T broad labor reform legislation. "Not that I wouldn't like to see a good, honest labor bill but we just don't have the votes," he said. ON THIS ; - ng two-year-o- The true ld ? . - - Goldfine: "People send me bolts of cloth Published by Herald Corporation, 190 W. 4th N., Provo, Utah, very afternoon Monday through Friday. Sunday Herald published Sunday morning. Entered as second "class matter at the post office . in Provo, Utah, under the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription terms by car- rier in Utah County: Per month $1.60 months in advance $9.60 One year in advance $19.20 By mail anywhere in the United States or its posses-y- . sions: $1.60 per month; $9.60 "for six month ' in advance; $19.20 for a year in advance. Herald telephone numbers: For editorial, circulation, ad- -. vertising and sports call for society tand FR aews briefs, call FR 6 Boy, 2, Hit, Killed By Father's Car SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) A horror-stricke- n Bountiful mother stood helpless at the window of a home here Tuesday as her husband accidentally ran his car over their son. The child was James Logan Green, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Green, . Bountiful. He was pronounced dead on arrival at a Salt Lake City hospital. Police said the accident , was not counted as a traffic fatality since it occurred on private OVER A QUARTER OF A MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY TO CHOOSE FROM Consisting of Home Furnishings committed for purpose of absolute Liquidation. Everything must be sold piece by piece or in lots. Come Today! EVERYTHING MUST 60 REGARDLESS OF VALUE OR COST! Kentucky Tbombon rvn s 10 a.m. to 12 noon and 2 p.m: to 5:30 two-year-o-ld EACH AFTERNOON AND EVENING I Whitky SAVE GAS IUY na a tut wkkxt ihm gwmffimg a NOTICE: BOgtbe 3LUHTHAL H G. .CO. BBurkozftf Straight w m am whisky "Usui mt WILL BE CLOSED ON SATURDAYS ALL DAY During Juno - July & August YOUR HEADQUARTERS PIPE LUMBING - VALVES HEATING I H. G. BLUMENTHAL FOR od (BtDii to CM) ffiB (Mte (fe Always smoother d because it's ' PLUMDING & HEATING CO. There are less costly ways to make bourbon whiskies but they'll never give you the smoothness you get in Early Times. The extra care and attention of slow distilling. . .the patient willingness to take twice as long... this is the way, the smoothing way to make whisky. Next time, ask for Early Times. G camiuiMfe el) to j old-sty- le FR 3-69- 20 to, miss, even if you 86 PROOF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY, EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY LOUISVILLE 1, KENTUCKY i :.'. have to will pay less This is it! E 00(388 MO 88 Gfc efew -- C0O MSG rur Come select any item you wish. No delay.' Your selection will be put on the Auction block and sold for Just what the public Is willinc to pay . . . NOT (or what It is it will bring at worth,, but what ' auction. Jl ' that you can't lay off work to attendit you. Everything must gol Regard- qcp at Auction How to Buy ' 351 South 2nd West, Provo C3cDG IS SOLD (Fl mm slow-distille- FITTINGS -PAIR CONDITIONING Prion afford CROWDS! RAMBLER Sat. p.m.-lnclu- ding Tnis is one auction entire home from top to bottom for a mere fraction of what you would expect to payl Just pay what you bid and bid only what you wish to payl . . . Overheard from Ladies . . "It's Fun to Bid and Buy at Auctions" . . . JOIN THE HAPPY l m 'TIL EVERYTHING This is the chance of your lifetime! Now you can furnish your V na ,1 97 WEST 3rd SOUTH PROVO, UTAH ii euro |