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Show I ' - :.' "'-.- SUNDAY, APRIL "17, 1960 Utah County. Utah1 & U Rose, waking aS the car drove in, gravel scattering beneath the wheels, looked with resignation at'i the r illuminated clock on her bedsWe table. 'She had two sleepy first; Thank heaven thoughts isx Sattomorrow - no,x today arid in Between then, urday;' " I 7 mm M Hill" UMbU I 1 I I I V4 mm "i r Provo Citizen Offers Solution ' to Westside 4 X .... i .':' Highway Problem : Put Road on a Toll Basis - " , , In air the discussion of xa west s; of the lake road, I fail to find mention of one logical solution . to the whole problem. The solution is simply to I have the route subject . to tolls. I suggest that i we would quickly find out spent how Ibadly "4the road :is "desired" parable for' extra gasoline, time, maint-nanc- e, etc., caused by, congestion! In addition, we need some good Her! , Provodn data on what the real value of road travel k to the road users Impressions of in this 'state, j. Why? ' As matters now stand, the bulk of vehicle tax Filmland revenues are collected in urban . -- by-pas- " ' moment later, the house door open. rtaw Mark was coming up the She would enclosed . stairway. know his step iftransported to Timbuktu and believing him in Philadelphia --- she heard it. j He came into the bedroom asking, as he always did, "Why aren't you asleep?" "I was, until the U. S. Cavalry thundered into the driveway." She walloped the pillow.s again, slid down ond wriggled a shoulder beneath ,the electric blanket. "How did it go?" she inquired. "Not! that I care at' this hour." "All right, except the speeches, which were dull, b arring Judge Bromley's. Food was good. Light traffic. I took Dave home and delivered him to Susan." The old floor boards creaked and Rose heard the clink of coins on his dresser as he emptied his pockets of change. MAny pen- I re-spe- nt . the fabulous city of all Sver the pad system, subsiwealth. A place dize new construction ion particu and beauty where a person knocks at oppor- lar! parts of the road system. Contunity consistently and ,hop- sequently, with the present tax efully. structure, it i$ impossible to estifriends and write implore mate the "denaand" for any parMy me to tell, them 'about the movie-ma- d ticular new rOad, e.g., the west town of Cinderellas, of of the lake proposal, heartbreak'- and disillusionments A. D. LeBaron rand the great rewards for those hardy people who have the determination of the do or die successes of the great stars. Poor Manners At ' Hollywood is a city within f many cities, a cross section of Events j all people great .and small. It Music ., has J a strange teeming quality Reader that gets into the ;mind, and soul Rapped by j and? lingers , like a breath- of Herald: Editor the from Magnolia perfume I have just returned from blossoms that bloom along the four-stamusical festival. hedjje where I am being treated this was the ultimate believe I for ;a malady as old as civiliza-- v in discourteous audiences. At tionS If my doctors can be 40 people (this is not an upon to r tell me the least in front of truth, it is a borderline , case. exaggetfationl walked the performance. I do feel fine. The raw diet, the me dusrangschool students would high fruit and vegetable' juices, the Many come back, ,and leave leave, rest, and wonderful the was rule, not clinfatet and such' nice people again. Talking ori a row One the exception. girl I have met all add to the cure. ' was me of TMs talking to a is Hollywood with ics in front ; . me. behind maic, but be prepared to faco girl with realty for this city within cities What is wrong was Provo's so bad has' its gutter, its slime, its manners? The crowd, " underground sewer, and' also a at the Utahi Symphony "Pops few mud puddlesA These I must Concert" that the conductor stop-- i warn the youth io sidestep, for ped the orchestra in the middle . all is not 'gold that glitters. 'If of a piece. ; baclo locales yow are a down to earth realist other especially Iq and can face facts as an adult East,: this situation does not exist. should, Hollywood is the place I suggest that we tell; our young for you. But if you have nothing people how they are supposed to rnofe' than beauty or- talent to act, and then" act that way our offer remember guys and gals1 selves. from all over the world are Wayne Larsen already here so you must have 1358 N. 380 W. a certain magic to your personality, call it the illusive ingre dient 'IT. There's a scout in every ' gath- Pvt.' Scott Graduates ering available to find stars of tomorrow. The town is, fulL of At Training Center studios and stock companies. The --galis are the ' most Army1: FORT SLOGUM, N. Y. beautiful and glamorous - in the world. The Pvt. Jasper D., Scott, son of Mr, guys are' a contrast. They work and Mrs. G. I. Scott, Orem, grad in stock to learn the art of act- uated from the Information School ing, How some of them live is at Fort Slocum, N. ty." "."beyond me. The guys look as Scott received eight weeks of though they hadn't had a hair training in public and troop in cut ' in weeks, but there is no formation, ,nwswriting, p r e s s4 evidence of malnutrition, they photography and look so beautiful and disgusting- - scriptwriting a n d broadcasting ly healthy. They walk by ' my techniques. apartment, a halfneaten apple in onj hand a manuscript in tne other. They, are a dedicated lot', then she continued, MI did chuck theTy powers the Elvises of a good husband for this make-belietomorrow, and every bit as handlife," she confessed. some each in his own way. While "Go get him back,7 1 said. . s atter men are following scienti"Can't, for he is married' to a fic pursuits they- are working girl not so pretty and not so ana dreaming and sticking in the' foolishf she confided thoughts world iof magic and make-beliefully and with remorse. the theater,, the movies and I couldn't take my eyes off TV. :.;.. her, she was that pretty. , f. met a girl one She continued, "I do have a day when we welre rounding a corner.: She is little girl to support, so tomorrow thf prettiest, girl I ever saw. I'll get a job, they advertise for SW looked a little cross and pretty waitresses." She got the very tired. I asked, "Are you an job, for I have Jiy lunches, there aclress-t-- I see you every, day just to keep in touchy as it were. . To me Hollywood speaks ancoming and going." She smiled and the world broke into a mil other language. I'm not in search lion sunbeams. She answered, of fame or fortune, but a better "I'm an actress in TV Westerns! way of life health. I just hate horses." Hope to see you all very soon. "Well," I advised, "get into Ethyl Hair something, else." Then she , did laugh. ; v. .. ;"You think I am pretty? So I am and so what? I just don: Drive to 1365 W. Center h4ve "IT," that certain magic (South side of Viaduct) , e quality that makes for the For a variety of and money." Shrubs, Trees. She looked thoughtful and sad, 3 Privit nedse Special ..... . . i . i - j . - 1 j . , - ke de.-pend- FORTH WORTH, Tex. (UPD Son, Kyle, couple's three-year-o- ld A shotgun blast on a lonely road who has his father's eyes and his etched the final chapter of a mother's pixie-lik- e smile,! is be- jo tragic love story that began ' five years ago in a Dallas orphanage. - It' was! the first time Alton, Richard Adcock, 24, had ever fired a shotgun. He pulled the trigger as his pretty, petite, brunette wife Thelma, 22, looked into his eyes and said: "Please forgive me, Richard." "She told, me to think "of our boy," Adcock said. "All If could think about was that other man who hadj been seducing her." He said, he was sorry now that he didn'tlkill himself 'at the same time, although it would have left their son! an orphan like he' and his wife had been. . Wife Dead In Ditch "I don't care," Adcock said. "My son! will never love me any more after this." Early Friday morning, Adcock, a traveling salesman for a furni walkod into a service tnro statirvni held ud bloody hands, and told the attendant: ."I've shot my wife. She's out there in a ditch A grand jury indicted Adcock fnr murder late Friday at the request of the district attorney's office. Judge Willis McGregor' ordered him held without bond; The is .4 ' , . , VN j You can't have everything . . ; who wants everything? Actually he had everything. 4 , -- i ed winter - ; at . . . . " before" . . - i up gosh, I'm bushed! it will be the one Saturday Debbie won't want to sleep until noon, The . ." His voice phone will be trailed off, his kiss slid down her cheek. "Good night, dear,'', he said. !Now she was coming more and doorstop. "What you saving for more awake. "If it's a good day, this time?" Mark asked, yawn- arid you play golf, remember we ;tdid Pam and Harry we'd stop ing. Sometimes it. was for his birth-da- y by for drinks," she said. or Christmas. present; f someHe muttered something in his "! times for something for one of sleep:.;- J v the kids which they couldn't or, Rose eased herself away from so 'Mark said afford. Again it him,-- but not too far; never too was for an early American chest, far. She couldn't makej up her and would probably takeher 50 mind whether she'd lie there and years. Mark had vetoed more worry because it had become evianswered dent to her and other people that So she antiques. nest egg Pam was drinking too much a "I thought gravely; for our tfirst grandchild." heaven grant that whatever the turnto he his shorts, trouble between her and Harry, Stripped ed toward her with an expression it wasn't serious and sheM snap of horror. ."Grandchild? Us?" out of it! or switch her conhe inquired and vanished into sideration to the unhappy facts the bathroom. that thelove seats must be two chairs needed When he returned, she asked covers and the j cleaner I "Did idiy, evertell you, my new slip his with teeth lost brushed fier father had good sweater. Or should think about she Castile soap?" maybe yawned again, and Debbie's marks, which had been 'Mark stretched. "Just what has your slipping ever since sheld fallen late father's peculiar habits to in love with the Hopkins boy. do with our nonexistent grand- - And if the little creature Tim children?" brought home with him last 'Nothing, ' unless they inherit, weekend foreshadowed an etidur- but they'd be his great-greMng pattern she, Rose, didn't want grandchildren. Isn't that stupe grandchildren, at least via lim. Debbie had said loftily, "You fying?" jiistV don't understand Tim." "Extremely." anyi"Well, Tim's 19" (Her tone, had implied, I'or h: "Fine. You can save quite a lot one.") K i h ; -i , t y 9t a , areas. These taxes are mainly Editor Herald: on particular, rural roads ' May I take this opportunity to whiefi may hajre little 'direct benesay I "Hi" to my friends back home. Here I am" in the land fit to users in other areas; In of fcnagic and make beliefs, short, taxes ' hich are collected a ii j tWl .: , - Capital emtm I ; Writes Hollywood, f if this is taken seriously. Some vehicle owners obviously would be willing to py a toll to escape the costs of congestion incurred when traveling through :: Utah County. The toll thus collected nies?" would have more social value in "Eight. I'll put them in the The bank, an enormous paying for the road than com- bank.' pottery pig, also functioned as a amounts that are Editor Herald: . I Distributed! by Newspaper Enterprise Assn. evitable snow, ice, ploughs and the flourishing way Mark gallops in, we'll need yards and yards of stone come spring. She switched on her light and punched the pillows into place) The autumn air was sharp. She heard the garage doors close footsteps on the gravel, and a V ';-- i. ;. . j: She said, "Kids marry awfully The morning was bright gold young nowadays, And besides, 1 1 and hard blue. There was still : was 19!" . color in the .leaves, but recent She : switched off the light as winds had brought down milMark got into bed. He put his lions., lmogene Xdidn't rattle i) - ; arm around her and hauled her dishes and the telephone was M silent until nearly 10. over to hi'm. "If lmogene doesn't wake me Mark land Rose hadi ia late ; -- breakfast' alone in the window or not, her eyes had always been was charm alcove from which they could sse But ner mam i it the little and .warmth, the; pond watcji birds at a feeder. lmogene came in, moving "When I think of raking leaves, i despite ' her bulk. Ifaark my back hurts," Mark, said, briskly her the question asked she, i passing his cup.; now was ner motnerr expeqiea: of think raking .When you was Joe? Could he give" leaves, you go after them ip a How; coMe daH raking frenzy for 22 minutes and i3hea,.them1a the Had child recovered youngest sea to call Joe and you tell me the from and the oldest measles, . . . a hand. if he can give you fromf.a broken recently You playing golf?" heart? "Sure; Pete, Dave, Ralph" lmogene andjoe had a large too. But he knew she wouldn't "What time for heaven's sake? was I voluble, exciting family. worrv much, or for long. jThe called volatile, I could have you. to the, Holmeses early came She awake at dawn." reason she wouldn't was, for 1 after every until not dinner, we're dayjleaving playing "Relax; him; equally a grave happiness after lunch. We'll grab a sand- except Thursdays, vswhen she left and a responsibility: she believed wich at the Club. Told, you last, after lunch, and Sundays, which 'in him; and trusted him. she had off. (Her children could night." Reaching home, he left the car aft ter themselves ; iher huslook "You didn't tell me anything. in the driveway, noting that the Don't forget we're going to band was a charmer who some garage doors were open and times consented to j work. Yarn's for drinks." Rose's car gone. - She toast of a piece 'Mark drove to the village for Mark spent his vacations here, picked up and looked at it critically. Then the papers after breakfast. He working in and out of the 'house, she said, "I wish to heaven you'd, naa oeen aomg weii wnen tney playing golf, going somewhere get gray well, anyway, a little bought the hiuse; they could nearby to fish, or taking Rose on He to move from the city. Ai small explorations. They hadn't grinned. "Yu "Why?" that time, even here, within com- been a wiay, summers, since they aren't, even without your illy '"" 2 rinse." the muting, distance, prices moved. You certainly couldn't as well "I know, but I might hadn't been, las now, astronomic- keep up with the Jonses if, in r be, I'm so mousy." al.-', Jy. hiil addition to a house in this secbe I'll "I can't promise gray Now, Marc thought, for the tion, they had a cottage on the for another 30 years. My father's hundreth time: It's paid for ani f Cape, orv a farm in Vermont, or hair isn't; my i mother's wasn't. kept up;' it's lours, and it's right. a beach place. Some of the very maintained affluent ,But I can assure you that in an other 10 years there won t be Mark couldn't imagine living small apartments in town or a enough left to turn." anywhere else. Now and then he hotel a. suite during the winter They laughed, looking 'at each would wake in the night, in a months when the commuting other. What they saw contented' cold sweat, : wondering . what grew? too wearjng for Mr J and them. Mark Holmes was an at- would happen if there were an- Mrs. J wanted to go. to all the tractive man, tall, slightly other depression, if his practice openings'. You! can't have everything, v . stooped, with features which ap- fell off, if hej could no longer afpeared to have been thrown to- ford to remain an this house. He Who wants everything?, . . . Acgether, but once assembled, had never spoke of jhtis to Rose, but tually!, he had everything. J achieved harmony. His wife was often thought: I bet she worries, (To Bie Continued) a smalbwoman, who had successfully counted her calories, or perhaps didn't need to. He thought she was pretty. Whether her hair was beginning to gray I , fii-r- rt -- live . ; j ? - af-for- ! j i N- - : - ''' pier. : , r f ; Joneses By Mitzi Bailey . . . nel 5. '.' The READY-TO-US- i ; M 1 'It's cheaper than you think ( ( ( Call Us Today'for a I j I j ' )) - - nuals.; Dahlias L . . V .FREE ESTIMATE Bullock Sales 1182 N. . & AY Sei-vic- e State Orem AC ( ( 1 69) COMPANY Ph. FR 51 Provo ". a andAmerican Only J Xi liforM i JLJ 6T pre-rhix- - 'A 1 JU h certified to exceed the Testing Materiak Specification Society rkrist on every sack. This means; SAKRETE arid only SAKRETE k garanepd to have been tested and proven to exceed the standards of exoellence set tip by a consumer! testing organization. Only Sakrete oaji claim this nationally-recognize- d quality. The proportk-- j under electronic con- ing of quality materials, mA assied resnks. a superior prod4jet sacks gara-nteeC-387-5- horizontally when planting, in lioles six inches ' .. deep ; . 'coyer inches of soil,:; gradually filling in as: growth progresses.! Large varieties are! staked when planted and pruned, when:" eight inches tall, to two strong shoots. Pompons and miniatures are pinched when the shoots are three inch, es high . to encourage branching and lots of blooms.!. Gladiolus is one the cutting garden and thes flower bbijder where , repeated .dumpings; give a handsome color; effect. A sunny location is ideal, ' though they jwkll tolerate light shade for part of the day. Good drainage and fertile soil; are essential. In! heayjj soil, the corms are set lour inches in light: soil, six deep. inches, When; plants are six inches high fertilize every two weeks until the f buds show color. You'll find! jthat your' supply dealer has garden PAX duality product a' for every garden and lawn care need. For a beautiful lawn and garden now.N ..and through out the summer, you can on PAX quality depend i products x j:with---;.iw!- ed .nA , of overwintering mildew to blossoms and new I Karathane sprays help protect growth. next year's buds. Karathane alsb suppresses early season mites. And best of all, Karathane, unlike sulfur, doese not harm buds, blossoms, fruit or foliage, Iwhen used as recommended. See your dealer or Rohm & Haas fieldman about a Karathane spray program for your orchards now. Post-bloo- m ! - i . j s Chemicals for Agriculture 01 ( -- : cor.iPArjv WASHINGTON Karathane m a trademarKReg. SQUARE, FKIIADELPHIA UJ& Pat. Off. 5, PA. ii II , and i principal foreign countries Available at building material dealers everywhere. I 1 require! Place: the Da ilia tubers 'APPLESi and PEARS can be protected against powdery mildew and mites by applying Karathanb WD in prerbloom sprays. This helps prevent spread IN THE BAG WITH THc BIG YELLOW DIAMOND MITCHSLl LANDSCAPING & COAL J location, fertile' soil, ample watering in dry weather and monthly applications ofj a fertilizer high in- potash and phosphorous, j x How to Plant x Control powdery mildew the modern; way Complete Landscape Service ; ' old-tim- Easy Payment Plan V li-- canna have revived intere favorest In this ite. Give canjvas ;a place in the sun and plant them two inches deepdn fertile soil. Dahlias contribute a wealth ' of color to the planting scheme. The tall Varieties will lend an illu-- : sion of height to deep ; corners of the border. The J pompons and miniatures; are ideal for combining with perennials and an- 59c . :j "M The Grand Opera series. and dwarf varieties of the ASKEW . V I Variety Available1 E ki sacks. . I Summer flowering bulbs are richly rewarding a.nJ colorful. jThere are. types that, will if it any location in partial shade or sun. Use: these bulbs! in mass effects in beds Iby themselves or in saps in your perennial garden. Com; bine them with annuals or work them into spaces in the foreground of the shrubbery border. You'll be delighted with the display they make in your summer garden. 'I i '" fw t concrete and mortar " I i 1 - . ' See MITZJ'S GARDEN,, every Saturday at 2:30 Chan p.m. on KSL-TV-,, sunny x (( Chain Link Fence?) , - ve . " i i ! MM- ve Ever-greens- ?' , mm ! big-tim- ' v kGARDEN i mm - " ' n on i j 1 1 : '. Adcock returned from. a trip through West Texas two days ago. He said when his iwife didn't .kisS'ihimj he knep something was " . wrong. told me she ;had been having an affair with another man." he said. "She in love, with him, ancf she told mo she wanted . a di vorcej. I wai boiling mad." x" ! radio-televisi- , in Thelma,'! ; - i' - know I had, to travel a lot, but I had all the faithf and trust : . j "I ' , 1 i di i ' ' . Pi 1 ; ! I , .'. i ing cared for by the court! There are no grandparents. Grew Up in Orphanage Thelma and Richard grjjw up together in the Buckne) Orphan age in Dallas. In. 1955, they real ized theyf loved eachi othet, and the following year they were mar J. ried. Adcock was described by con-ab- le Harold Vernon, as "a real nice . guy who didn j dnnk or The couple was de smoke. scribed ' by Vennon as a "charm- ing family, well-like- d by every- one." X "We had1 always Wanted a home. We worked - and worked hard to get one," Adcock said. "We owned all our own furniture, we had two cars, and we had money in the bank. This was the life that I had always- dreamed of and I. couldn't have! been hap- , - 5A Unfaithful Wife Killed By Traveling Salesman oil sgeeate 1959 by Faith Baldwin Cuthrell. Copyright SUNDAY HERALD ' - S HI- - . . x Jl - i ' .11 " U |