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Show Utah Vote Tuesday May U ta h Cou nfy Voters Wi Record 11 Help Decide 14 Contests In '60 Primary Election Utah County Ballot Includes Commission, Legislative Contests ' I 1 s. 196,-06- ' , " I jv high. Including every political level in - the state county, Legislature and all, there will be a total, of 129 partisan races to settle in the conprimary and '2 Sixth in the and Third Ju-- . tests, non-partis- 4dicial Districts. Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. '58 . Higher Than Even if the Tuesday voting should fall! short of the record mark of 1956, it's almost sure ;the' final count will find a total considerably higher than the last statewide election, 1958, when '. oniy 120,000, persons voted in the primary. Eight years ago the pri-- ! i i . votes. off-ye1958 The election, when only seats in the U.S. House of Representative and one , Senate chair were; at stake, failed to mary drew; about . 150,000 ar -- generate , much interest because of its small size. I Traditionally, elections $ are consider-- , ' ably smaller than the leap-yea- r affairs were both national and state major; offices are at stake. Election districts are slightly more numerous this year than in 1958. Two years ago the state . off-ye- ar . . tpUVLof 1,077 election dis- tricts.r Since "Cnen "there have "been had:; .tii,. .4 VOL. 38, NO. 17 a PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH Campaign oratory in Utah County was on the home stretch today, and in 48 hours the voters will have, their turn" to speak at the polls! Voting in the primary election will take place Tuesday between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. of the hdurs-oficdals cautioned citizens to re member the 7 p.m. closing time. Under Utah law the polls will re main open until 8,p.m. at the Nov ember election, but close an hour earlier in the 'primary. Voters will mark either the Re publican or the Democratic ballot Tuesday. In the primary election you can't scratch back and forth It's one party or the other, the purpose being to choose the party's nominees to go on the November f mmmmmmm iiiiiiii , , f' - - m SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1960 ...... - ..-- ii in ..... i .. United Press International FT. MYERS, Fla. (UPI) Hurricane Donna smashed its way up. the west coast of Florida Saturday, sending n residents scurrying; for shelter and leaving a dollar swath of destruction in its wake. The giant storm, generating 135 !MPH winds near its center, crashed across the Florida i Keys early today leaving the resort town of Marathon a shambles. It arched northward in the gulf committing new forays against thf -- 'f x : x. multi-millio- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (UPI) Moderate President Joseph Kasa- vubu of the Congo notified the Security Council Saturday that he, had fired .Premier Patrice Lumumba for the second time within a .week and formed a new government that would repro-Russi- an nounce; Soviet aid and follow the United Nations. The council adjourned its emergency debate on the Con go crisis . until Monday shortly after Kasavubu's caiblegram to Secretary Dag Hammarskjold was on received. , The Lumumba representative at the council earlier had requested postponement of the debate to al low a Congolese delegation to ar rive from Leopold ville. J JL.c ' .. lj v I U.S. Warning end of the meeting was . marked by a stern warning from America's new U.N. Ambassador James J. Wadsworth who declared that the United States would not "stand idly by and see the Soviet Union flout the will of the United Nations'- in the Congo. Wadsworth spoke after Soviet Deputy. Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov objected to an appeal mrnm - bjiuncil.J2rMeiU-- J r -- TEARS OF JOYThey can be. seen welling in the lovely eyes of Nancy Anne FlemrngTlS, the former Miss Michigan, as she is crowned Miss America of 1961. With her is Lynda .Lee, Mead of Mississippi, Miss America of 1960. The pair are shown shortly after! the conclusiori of judging at the Miss America contest in Atlantic City. 150-MP- H . Michigan Beauty Crowned Miss America For 1961 left-leanin- ' . V The runners-u- p in the pageant were Miss California, Suzanne Marie Reamo, 20, of LaMelsa; Miss North Carolina, Ann Farrington Herring, 19, of Winsbon-SaieMiss District of Columbia, Ruth Rea, 18, of Chevy Chase, Md.; and Miss Indiana, Tommye Lou Glaze, 21, of Culver. Only Double Winner Miss Michigan was the only double trophy winner in the three nights of preliminary judging. She scored both in swim suit land tal ent. The girfs from Alabama, Utah and Indiana, all classical! singers, also won early talent victories. The other two preliminary trophy winto normal j: limit restric- ners in swim suits were Miss South tions, emphasizing the slap at Carolina and Miss District of Coj m; 5. ar . SEATTLE, Wash. (UPD One By BRUCE W. MUNN of the sharpest earthquakes in United Press International several years shook the Puget UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD Sound area at 7:06 a.m. PST toThe United States today restrictday but no' damage was reported. ed Soviet Premier Nikita. Khrush Prof. Frank. Neumann, Univer- chev to Manhattan Island during DEMOCRATIC PARTY of Washington seismologist, his visit to the U.N. General As For Governor William A. "Bill" Barlocker, St. George mayor, sity said the temblor registered five sembly. It was a slap in the face biisinessman' and' turkey rancher, vs.. Ira A. Huggins, Ogden at- - He said an intensity of six would that said Khrushchev is not weL .1;, torney. ... ; cause "moderate damage." come in the United States. For Secretary of State Laurel J. Brown, West Jordan mink Neumann said the quake was Similar travel restrictions were rancher vs. Harvard .Rv Hinton, Lehi attorney and state senator. centered within 25 miles of Seat- imposed' against Hungary's Janos For Attorney General William H. "Bill" Henderson, Salt Lake tle but he could not say in which Kadar, who took over in Hungary attorney, vs. Warwick C. "Rick" Lamoreaux, also a Salt Lake City direction. (Neumann explained the and purged the freedom fighters ' attorney..'! first shock knocked his instru- who had not been killed; and Al For State Treasurer Wayne W. Ilymas, Tooele businessman, ments off, scale. banian Premier Mehmet Shehu, vs. Sharp M. Larsen, incumbent Salt Lake County treasurer. Seattle's last serious earthquake the "butcher" of Albania. The For Utah County Commisisoner Emory D. Andrews, was on April 13, 1949. That quake TJnited States does not have dipmayor of Alpine, vs. Dave Greenwood, American Fork businessman. caused an estimated $50 million lomatic relations with Albania. . t For State Representative, (Utah County Legislative District damage and killed several Other Communist leaders with ' No- - 2) Thorit C. Hebertson, incumbent, Orem-Vineya- rd educator, persons. will be subject only Khrushchev vs. Melbourne D. Wallace, horticulturist and mayor of Orem. For State Representative (Utah County Legislative District No. 6) Allen iL. Hodgson, Payson attorney, vs. Francis S. Lundell, Benjamin farmer and rancher. ,'' . ; REPUBLICAN PARTY t For United States Congressman (Second Congressional District) Harlon W. Bement, Salt Lake City; state director of aeronautics, vs-- . Sherman P. Lloyd, Salt Lake attorney and president of the Utah State1 Senate. For Governor George Dewey Clyde,' engineer, educator and incumbent' governor, vs. Lamont B. Gundersen, Salt Lake County Commissoner and realtor and church leader. For Secretary of State Verl G. Dixon of Provo, former Utah County Commissioner and present construction superintendent for an architectural firm, vs. Lamont F, Toronto of Salt Lake City, incumbent secretary of state and former businessman. For Utah County Commisisoner F. Rulon Nicholes of American Fork, iucuimbent county commisisoner, vs. Herbert B. Stratton, Orem fruit grower and educator. For State, Representative (Utah County Legislative District No. 2) Douglas E. Johnson, Orem educator, vs., C. Wilford Larsen, Orem fruit grower and rancher. For State Representative (Utah County Legislative District ,No 3) Arthur R. Morin, Provo school teacher and insurance man, vs. Lynn L. Weight, Provo real estate and insurance man. i For State.' Representative (Utah County Legislative-Distric- t ' No. 5) Harrison Conover, Springville publisher, vs. LeRoy D. . .. Springville agricultural leader . 1 , , .. ear Tin-.xc- y. , Veteran Cong resswoman Dies 2 Days Before Primary Vote LOWELL, Mass. (UPD U. S. ed her to a short public life but Edith Nourse Rogers, she gained steadily in popularity Rep. who served in congress until opposition faded away. (R-Mas- s), longer than any other woman, died unexpectedly of a heart seizure Saturday. , The longtime champion of veterans legislation died at 10:05 a.m. EDT, at a Boston- - hospital where she had gone Aug. 21 for treatment; of an undisclosed ailment. She died of a myocardial infarction! or clotting in blood vessels of the heart. Mrs. Rogers began her record term in the house in 1925 when she was elected to replace her ate husband. Rep. John Jacob Rogers, Experts doom (R-Mas- s.) j Nikita Restricted To Manhattan On U.N. Tour Sharp Quake Rocks Seattle Here's What the Ballot Will Look Like for Utah County peninsular state's west coast. It raked Fort Myers, a city of 22,000, with winds of up to 130 MPH and was blamed for at least one fatality. The long eye of the storm passed over the city between 3 and 4 p.m. EST Saturday. At 5 p.m. EST the big storm was centered at latitude 27.0 North, longitude 82.0 West, or a short distance North of Fort Myers, which has served as the winter home of such notables as Thomas E. Edison, Connie Mack, Harvey Firestone and Henry Ford. Headed For Tampa The weather bureau said it was moving towards the north at about 11 MPH and was expected to continue toward the north at the same rate of speed for the next 12 to 18 hours. Tampa prepared for the worst. Emergency shelters were opened in schools and persons were urged to bring their own bedding and bread. Grocery s reported all the bread in the city had been bought up. Donna has been blamed .for a total of three deaths since she slammed into the Keys early today "with fury. She was credited with more than 100 deaths during her, sweep past Puerto Rico and through the Lesser Antilles. Ft. Myers was struck a smart blow by the howling storm.4 Power lines and telephone communications were knocked out, trees uprooted and windows smashed. A UPI reporter on the scene said the rain "came down in vast sheets just like a blanket." Roofs Torn Off The roofs of a number of homes and a school gymnasium were torn off by the high winds, Mark Brooks, news director of radio station WMYR in Ft. Myers reported. He said there was particularly (Continued on Page Four) 19-mi-le - : i . . . " .' By ALVIN B. WEBB AI- , - j ' ar the-governo- CENTS . 1 tona of Italy for the big powers to consolidations in some, areas and refrain from any action that could expansions in others with the re-. : aggravate the crisis. sdlt that' the total .now . stands at I am deeply disturbed by the 1128. This is broken down into statements of the Soviet Union and 543 election districts in the First of Poland, which removed any doubt that they have every inten Congressional District and 585 in the Second. tion of continuing to take actions ' Governor Highlights in the Congo .which are detrimenof American Fork, the. incumto peace," Wadsworth said. tal As is most often the case, high- bent, is being challenged by HerThey are clearly in defiance of light interest of the - election will bert B. Stratton, Orem fruit farm- the letter and spirit of .the U.N. contests. Both er and school teacher. Seeking the foe on Council resolutions which Security to settle. Democratic nomination are Emery parties have races themselves they supported." r 'Incumbent Gov. George D. Clyde D. Andrews, mayor of Alpine, and The statement echoed President David L. .American Greenwood, seeks, another term; with Chairbut appearing to be on the verge By RALPH VILLERS j Eisenhower's warning Wednesday man Lamont B. Gundersen of the Fork businessman. United of International Press tears, walked down the runway A second county commission race that the Soviet Union in its Congo Salt Lake County. Commission in ATLANTIC is N.J. triumph amid shouts of apwith , (UPD policy CITY, flirting will be featured in November, pitdanger. challenging him as the Republi-- r from the more than 18,000 Ann plause a Kasavubu's new brunette to 18, bid Nancy Fleming, ' can Party standard bearer in Nov- ting the Democratic incumbent, remove the strong g beauty from Michigan, Saturday spectators.! erratic, o fSpanish Fork Nielson Marcellus ember. from office was bolster- was named Miss America oi 1961, Miss Fleming is 5 feet 6 inches former Commissioner Ster- Lumumba ed Both are proven vote getters. against 1960's a Lee Mead. and weighs! 116 pounds. Her measby declaration Hammarskjold succeeding ;Lynda ling D. Jones of Spanish Fork, Rein to The ran new the Miss made council last night. The surprisingly strong Clyde America, smiling urements are publican. Both men were unoppos- U.N. chief said , the Congolese con- 1956, his first time, as a candi- ed for the nomination for the four-yedate. Gundersen was the only continued on Page Four) position.' member' of hhis party running for Personal Danger Stressed Legislative Posts major county office to survive in There are no primary contests the 1958 Democratic landslide. for state representative in LegisIra Huggins, an Ogden attor- lative Districts 1 and 4. In Disney who: has held a variety of trict 1, incumbent Ernest H. Dean (Continued on Page4 Four) " (Continued on Page Four) . 15 j j N. The i.. ' . Kasavubu Forms New Regime; Renounces Soviet Aid Pro-U.- PRICE f. Vast Destruction Left In Its Wake On Congo Postp oned 14 all-Uta- . - U.N. Debate ballot. Contests The ballot that will confront Utah County voters will have a total of seven contests on the Re publican side and seven on the Democratic side to be voted. However, no one district will have that many, since some of the contests are for state representa tive to be voted only in the leg islative district applicable. The topnotch contests, of course. are for governor, where William. A. Barlocker and Ira A. Huggins are vying for the Democratic nomination and incumbent George Dewey Clyde and Lamont B. Gun dersen are battling for the Repub lican nod. v In the only national contest, bnerman P. Lloyd and Harlon W. Bement are seeking the Republican nomination for U.S. representative from the Second Congressional District which includes the counties at Utah, Salt Lake, Davis and Tooele. The winner will face the Democratic incumbent, David S King, in November. Mr. King was unopposed. Secretary of State Two Utah County men are seek-- , mg tne nomination of the separate parties for secretary of state, and if both win, there will be an h County finale in November. Democrat Harvard R. Hinton of Lehi is running against Laurel J. Brown of West Jor-da; amiVerl-- f G. Dixon of Provo is challenging the incumbent secretary of state, Lamont F. Toronto for the GOP nomination. Each ballot will have an interesting primary .election contest for two-yeUtah County Commissioner. Republican F. Rulon Nich-ole- s " I" ooa' Smashes Florida Coast ... . . ' in w 'i ' -- 1 ; Little change In tempera-tur- e. High today near 5. Low tonight 50 to 55. today. Record Utah Primary Vote of 196,061 Likely To Be Broken By KEITH WALLENTINE United Press International ,, The candidate list for Utah's primary election Tuesday is the longest in many years and few politicians would be surprised if the voter turnout reached a new record of around 200,000. In 19S6 the present primary 1 election .record was set at voters. The pitfer personal . intensity, of the 1956 primary is lacking this year hiit the state's voting population has grown considerably during the; past four years. And with a bumper crop of. 18 candidates including both parties on the statewide level and "in Congress sheer volume! alone insures a great deal of! .voter interests. Registrations also have been unusually x Partly Cloudy t Republican party leaders planned to hold an emergency meeting Sunday in efforts to pick a substitute last minute "write-in-" nominee for Tuesday's1 primary. P. Galvin, Rep. now becomes dean of women in congress, having served since 1940. There are 15 other women in congress. Only six male colleagues had served longer than Mrs. Rogers. At her 30th, anniversary party, Mrs. Rogers smiled graciously at high praise from her ; on Page Four) (R-Ohi- o), Frances v col-(Contin- 25-mi- le Khrushchev. Representatives of Czechoslovakia and YugoPoland, slavia' can travel as' they 'please. The State Department had warned that Khrushchev would be in greater danger during his visit here starting Sept. 19 than he was as an official guest last year because of his "hostile' statements" against the United States and the shooting down of American planes. Russia still holds two( RB47 pilots on spy charges despite U. S. statements the detention is j. illegal. Krhsuchehv and a party of East European Communist officials arrive, in New! York Sept. 19 aboard the Russian liner Baltika on what the Russians have termed a "voyage iof peace" that could become the "turning point" in world politics. The U.N. session i begins Sept.! 20. A State Department j Allies Strike Back at Red Berlin Curbs LONDON Western allies struck back at Communist" East Germany ' today and imposed severe on East Germans wishing to travel to the West, authoritative sources reported in London. The sources said the West had stopped granting transit visas fdr East Germans who want to travel outside the iron curtain. The measure was in direct retaliation against the East German regime's latest restrictions on access to West Berlin. Today's' development was foreshadowed by. the allies Friday when they warned the Soviet Unr ion they would take all steps necessary to end the regulations imposed by East Germany in violation of agreements on Berlin. The counter - restrictions, effective today, came as East German border police began slowing truck traffic to Berlin by making some truck drivers stop and unload their trucks for inspection. The Communists said they were (Continued on Page Four) counter-restrictio- ns - . four-pow- er , Exercise Sky Shield Results Of Air Defense , Nasser, Tjto To Attend Upcoming Session of U.N. (UPH-T- lie Test Secret COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. Whether (UPD this continent' air defense system was strong enough to repulse a make - be- lieve nuclear attack early Saturday was kept secret from the .,:! public. "We expect lasting benefits from OARIO (UPD 'President Gamal the exercise,' was all. that Gen. lumbia, The other four- girls, who had Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Laurence S. Kuter, commander of not won preliminary trophies, piled Republic will attend the United the North American Air Defense up enough points in their talent, Nations General Assembly session Command (NORAD) headquarters swimsuit and evening gown ap- starting in New York Sept. 20 it here, would reveal following the six-hoexercise known as "Sky pearances to join the select ranks was announced today, s. s of the Shield." .,."! Seven entrants were named for However, he did express h 1 s BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UPI) out$1,000 scholarships for being President Tito of Yugoslavia "sincere appreciation to American standing in their talent although will lead his country's delegation 'and Canadian public, airline operto the United, Nations General As- - ators and civilian authorities for they were not among the Isemi-fin- alists. their understanding and cooperaThey, are Miss Texas, Mary Cage news agency, Tanjug announced tion during the temporary ground(Continued on Page Four) ing of civilian aircraft during the today. exercise." Kuter said the exercise -' , ... " !.. '. was carried out "under realistic conditions." Made Mock ' Exercise Sky Shield included a simulated nuclear, attack by bombers of the Strategic Air Command (SAC) on major population centers, industrial targets and mill- N.Y. A Half Mile Away SONYEA, (UPI) The tary bases over 14 million square Their bodies were found half a miles of United States and Canada. bodies of five boys aged Il3 to 15 During the maneuvers, the skies who had been missing since mile from the point of entrance, ' in the area were cleared of comhe said. Wednesday from a state epilepthe first time anything like mercial and private aircraft, "It's tics hospital were found Friday this has ever The air defense complex of the happened, night in a , heating tunnel on the shocked official told United Press NORAD, charged with the responsi' . hospital grounds. , International. , bility of protecting the continent It was suspected that they died Names of the boys were with- from air attack, went into action from asphyxiation due to lack of held pending notification of their to repulse the attack. Whether it ' oxygen and intense heat. The tem- families. ' did or didn't remained a perature in the narrow, darkened The boys died 2Q feet "undersecret; tunnel reached up to 140 or 150 ground in a ligbtless. tunnel, 10 degrees, a" hospital spokesman feet high by. 10 feet wide, that j - . ur semi-finalist- ... - (i- ; Bodies of Five Missing Boys Found in N.Y. Hospital Tunnel ck j announce- ment demanded that Khrushchev remain close to the skyscraper U. N. headquarters on the east side ' it was the of most severe restriction imposed on any U.NJ delegate and an un precedented restriction on a visit ing head of state. The nearest thing in U.N. his tory came during the Korean war when a Chinese Communist ob server was permitted only to trav el from his rooms in the Waldorf-Astori- a Hotel to Lake Success, 25 miles out on Long Island, where UJN. headquarters was located then. The fact the restrictions did not apply to the1, others was even more of a slap at Khrushchev, Khrushchev was informed of the mid-Manhatta- n. ) (Continued on Page Two) . " j well-guard- ed L : said. Dr. Vincent Bonafede, jdirector of the Craig Colony and Hospital here, said the five boys: apparently broke a window in a kitchen basement, made their way into a and then wandered into the "maze of tunnels" connecting the - more than 100 buildings on the hospital ground. , j . sub-cell- ar ' I . leads from the kitchen where they entered to the central powerhouse. Heat Is Overpowering Insulated pipes for heating and hot water line the tunnel walls. Bonafede said that even though the heating system was not operating full blast at this time of year, the heat in the tunnel was overpowering. . Now You Know , By United Press International A person, is taller in the morning than in the evening, because the 24 vertebrae of the backbone yield considerably to the pressure due to the weight of the . body when it is erect and expand while . it is in a recumbent position. |