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Show SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER S,j 1961 Utah County, Utah SUNDAY HERALD 8 I 1 ,; E 1 Moss Gives Amendment To Wilderness! Bill; Objects To Bennett's ! -- 4 Sena WASHINGTON,' D. C. tor Frank E. Moss this week introduced an amendment to the wilderness bill that would provide for annual reports to Con gress on wilderness areas, including a list and descriptions. His amendment will change no provision of the bill regarding land reservation and manage ment, the; Senator said, but is "so folks " back East Will! know the attractions we have to offer Utah." In in. the troducing the amendment Moss told the Senate, in part; Tourist Magnet "In my opinion, the existence of wilderness areas, as Senator Anderson's splendid Committee Report on S. 174 stated, is going to act as a magnet for tourists, in the years ahead. "The High Uintas will be but one area of great natural grand- eur available to the people of the nation within the' boundries, of my State. There will be Other great scenic areas unduplicated anyin Bryce where in the world Zioh Na National Park. Canyon tional Park and the Arches, Capitol Reef and Dinosaur National Monuments, and. I hope soon, a Canyonlands National Park. "I want the citizens of the Uni ted States to know about these areas so even more of our citi zens will coma out and visit erness system at once, without the review provided by the bill. Senator Moss said: "Mr. President; a. number of amendents have been filed to S. 174, the Wilderness r Bill J which is shortly to come before the Senate fdr consideration. Among inem is an amendment; by my colleague; from Utah, Mr. Ben- nett,! intended to put the High Uintas Primitive area into the Wilderness Preservation; System without further review by the Na- tibnal Forest Service. "Ii ask. unanimous corisent to put in the, record a letter! 1 have received from the Forest Service,! confirming my! understand ing that! some alteration! of the boundaries of the ;High Uinta area a wonderful 240,000 acre tract of great scenic beauty-i- s desirable The etter from the Forest Service, and ah Accompanying taiapi indicates! that the Forest supervisor in cnarge of the High Uinta area favors the removal of labout .40,000 acres of the present primitive area from the reserva ion, because it Contains! certain reservoirs ana structorcs which impinge on the wilderness char acter and can best be maintained outside of: wilderness. He has lso recommended inclusion in he crest of Uintas; lying just north and east of the present Raises Objection Senator Moss recently ann6un ced his opposition to an animend- ment to the Wilderness Bill, pro posed by Senator Wallace F. Ben: would place nett i40,000-acre the , area of Utah's High Uinta; Mountains in the wild' ''BLACK FROST" "Black frost"; is the seaman's name for clouds of icy haze which skim! across the; sea's surf ace and wrap ships in a cocoon of spray which freezes hard. Unless the crew's can hack this ice aWay, its weight can capsize a small ship. (D-Uta- h) ; K ! 'V . West-especial- ly v f ;"' : 4 s 'S'-- ::f c trailer at Riverside Motel. Little Ronnie Glines, 4, J surveys the damage. Owner of the trailer was out of town. PROVO WIND DAMAGE A gust of .wind during Frir dity's storm toppled this billboard onto an empty house f Wind Topples Billboard on Trailer House Rofarians Stbrm Brings Snow On Mountains, Wintry Chill r Told About Use of Land Snow on the mountains anajaj pitation was listed by the government staj ion in Provo chilly 45; degrees greeted Provo-- cial at .08 of an- - inch,! but it was s 1 ;r"'-- it - ' Vv ' in the ans Saturday morning M spotty and believed j:o' be more in wake of Friday's storm. Preci- some areas. Forecast, for this morning was another chilly low, which might drop as far as 44. To California Post The fall ranges and reduced fire danger but gusty winds in the Provo area toppled a huge billboard over on an empty house trailer at Riverside Motel in the area of 13th North and U.S. 91. The storm will not bother - the sugar beet harvest, said County Agricultural Agent Clair Acord, but it may cause si )me delay in .. harvesting hay and grain and Donald M. Northwood, veteran may have split- - a few ripe tomatoes. Consolidated Western Steel Ar wind gust toppled a big adrelations specialist, has m wwwiiwi.wu hppn. . flrvrvmntpri vertising billboard Sacross a :. t r tne trailer owned! by Joseph to assistant of labor director Proksch, Salmon, Ida., a Brig-hafoi ions r el at Young 'University student. this U.S. Steel The crash broke, the billboard in two and dented) the trailer-houspromotion was The owner is in Salmon n' on vacation announced Satprior to opehing of Rothe fall term. urday by bert W. Sigg, director of labor relations!.: Since March 1955, Mr; Northwood has served BORN as superintendent of industrial AT UTAH VALLEY HOSPITAL relations for ' the modern, Utah Saturday: Pipemill near Provo. He will Boy to Donald and Beverly make his new office at Consoli- Miller Johnson of Salt Lake; dated Western Steel's headquarBoy to Stanley arid Ella Peck ters at Maywopd, Calif., near jrinch of Orem. Los Angeles. Friday: ' He began his .. steel industry Girl to Spencer arid Joan Marlow 1922 Belliston of Murray. career in when he joined arid the former Western Pipe Girl to Osjmer k and Thora. Steel of! California as a time- Peterson Bills of Pr0vo. keeper during construction of the MARRIAGE LICENSES Vernon Plant.; He was named Val LeRoy Harris, 24, Provo. paymaster for the new facility ana Carolyn Fjeldstd, 23,, Provo. upon its completion. . Gary Ray Church, 21, Provo-anIn 1941, Mr. Northwood was Jessie appointed personnel manager at 22. Provo. Kay 'Hardy Gardner, the Vernon Plant and, when the James Baer, 25, Provo, parent firm later became part of and Ruth Logan .271 Provo. Athay, U.S. Steel, was named supervisor John Wallace Boswell Jr., 19, of industrial relations for this and Provo, Nielsen, facility. He took over the post 19, 'Provo.. Nancy Joyce as superintendent of industrial Charles James Porter, 23, Sacrelations at the then - new Utah Calif. r and Alda Mae ramento, Pipemill shortly before the start Powell, 23, Lehi.' j of production. William Dean Rupper, 32, ProMr. Northwood is a 'member vo, and Alice' Muriel Salerno and former director of the Amer- Gardner, 22, Provo. ican Fork Lions Club and a mem Russell Lee Sutherland, 24, Prober of the Riverside .Country vo,. and Carolyn Woodruff, 20r Club. He and--' his wife, Eva, re- Provo.sided at 77 S. 3rd W. in AmerArt Barron, 23, Orem, and Barican Fork and will make their bara Burton, 19, Orem. new home in Southern California. Stephen Ray Colledge, 18, Orem, and Marie Jenny Sorensen, 18, American Fork. Don Smith Participates Heber Daniel Snow, 25, Spanishi Fork, and Joyce Rahee Gull, 20, In Amphibious Exercise Spanish Fork. j William Gale, 24, Spring-villTerry 7TH INF. DrV, Korea Army and Joan Gill, 19, Sprlng-vill'" Specialist Four Donald G. Smith participated with other personnel Darwin Edward Barnes, 19, from the 7th Infantry Division in Salem, and Judy Elmer, 17, Pay-so: Operation Sharp Edge, an am..(. phibious training exercise on the Harold Frank Lewis, 20, Prosoutheastern shore of the Repub- vo, and Sandra .Louise Skaggs, 21, lic of Korea. -, Provo.j ' The soldier is the son Robert LeRoy Barnett, 21, and of Mrs. Blanche L. Smith, Provo. Nona Alice Pia, 20, Salt Lake. ' rj rain-freshene- f Consolidated SEEKS CROWN Penny Rae Santa Hafen Clara, Utah's' Dairy Princess, who seeks na tional Dairy Princess crown atf Chicago. d - Pipie Elevates Am. Fork Mart !. f : - ! , ial Utah's Dairy - . Princess Is 45-fo- ot, i- - m : 1 lllinois-Bou- n e. Winsome, blonde Penny Rae Hafen, Utah's Dairy Princess will participate! in the American Association's national Dairy contest in Chicago Princess Dairy it Was during Sept. Tues'day. by Wallace A. Parrish, Logan! Mr. Parrish is Dairy Princess committee chairman for, the American Dairy Association of Utah, sponsor of the competition in the state. Miss Hafen is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Preston Hafen of Santa Clara, Washington county. Both parents wm, acuoxnpauy uieir daughter to Chicago,, as will Mrs. Lincoln- Jensen. Morgan.i repre senting the ADA of Utah. ":M Penny Rae is hopeful of following in the footsteps of another Utah - contestant, Carol Ralphs of Ferron, Emery county, who acnieyed tne nonor of oemg tne 10-1- 3, ah-nounc- ed -- - - national jDairy Princess. In her royal! duties within tne state 'Penny Rae has presided over thef Utah June Dairy! Month observance, and the recent butter festival.' Upcoming lis the Utah Dairy Foods Festival which 1959 he will- be heading immediately upon her return from Chicago - la mid-Septemb- jj i er, f y The whirlwind festival ' tour takes in a score of meetings along the 1,400 mile route through - the state. . The Dairy Princess "and her attendants will demon-10-da- -- about; the industry and its pro-aucxs, ana aiiena civic iuncuuns and school assemblies, ' During the past year Penny Rae has been attending Utah "State University at Logan on an I j ADA of Utah scholarship. !i , . - y-hi- ! J ':'.! Patrol Stages Drive Jeep To Buy Rescue .organized for the purpose &f fiiii county for an Current project of ing a need in the , the Utah County Sheriff's Search uraniisuui suarcn aim it'scuy unui cam and Rescue Jeep Patrol is the is conductinc a the piirase of Myin search for and rescue of ood iiaign-foAmerican dollars, The group skin diving and mountain clambling equipment to add to their search and rescue unit.- This equipment will make the uni more fully prepared for a broa er coverage of search and rcjscu missions in the county, officer! J stated. .Men of the patrol give freely of time and equipment when called, to aid thdse in distress or 'in times of disaster. Memj-ber- s are affiliated with civil defense and hold first!' aid certificates. The red and white jeep of this Patrol has become a familiar sight on. the highway and. In civic j parades and activities. A growing , roster of grateful citizens! who have 'received" aid frorft the 30 mpmbers of the pa trol attest to its. effectiveness. Each member of the patrol required to own, equip and oij erate a drive vehicle at his own expense. Periodic inspections are made to insure constant readiness of the vchiclei. The Utah County Patrol Is one of several units in the state fa( filiated with state and national associations. Wives nf 'tncmhprs have banded together to form ah Auxiliary aiding the orgahia-tion, as needed. .At the conclusion of the fund drive; a jeep will be awarded oh By 'MILDRED'-HALtop-priori- ty Jj fund-raisin- ci r - . . el pre-- Harvard University wai - iioivaiu j iiivjuitri ill x7JJ as a. rendezvous, for American visitors! Jefferson iDrtvis' walking stick ik one of the treasures preserved, in the house. " - WHO'S GOT IT?, A hoti race is in progress! toward the cen ter of this, candy" bar between a little Billy , of Park Ridge, and Jo-JThe race was his dog, at a tie called least the candy soon disappeared and' apparently each got. about an equal -- 111-- rn a r--ir o. Serving ENROLL NOW IN PREPARE FOR YOUR FUTURE Kiol-bas- . in the Pacific aboard the radar! Teleph6toX7 picket destroyer USS Frank Knoxj share. (Herald-UP- I operating out of Long Beach,! The American liberty Bell was Calif., is Richard A. Wanlass, fire man apprentice, USN, son of Mr cracked while tolling for the fu and Mrs. Elmo Wanlass of 45 E. neral of Chief Justice Johri Mar- - s"ar3n rtr nn r TO BEGIN SEPTEMBER 7th at CENTRAL UTAH VOCATIONAL SCHOOL 1400 NORTH BY REQUESTED AUTOMATION UTAH INDUSTRY i ; : .. .1 r OTOER TRADE- TECH CLASSES e. AVENUE - PROVO j A fill! UNIVERSITY N INSTRUMENTATION and NEW CLASS $7 a n n ; . L 1 HARVARD HOME U.S. Navy Destroyer , Eguipmeht Oct. 19. Wanlass Aboard ' j ' J I i ' four-whe- j i g' . i j 1st S., Lehi. j ', hs LONG BEACH, Calif. - I ! j self behind the steel! bars of a county building hall gate Saturday about 10:30 a.m. Unaware the building Is normally closed on Saturdays, he stepped in the open door to use the restrooms. The caretaker, Dave Bigler, unaware anyone was f in the building, locked the doors. The steel gate locks off the sheriff and highway patrol offices at the north end of the ground floor from other offices. The officers had no key to re! , j - j- TECHNICAL i i Electronics - Electricity - Radio - TV - Etc. j .mm : , lease Trevor Perry, 49, Perry, Uta, but they called Mr. Bigler, who unlocked the ' gates J Mr. Perry" was locked ' in for j 0m WEST PR0V0 Many Back - To - School Bargains on NEW and USED TYPEWRITERS WIDE CARRIAGE GENEALOGY MACHINES. . $Q950 "CALl US TO INSTALL YOUR NEXT RIBBON" JUST ACROSS FROM SEARS FR 3-36- 31 V TYPING-SHORTHAND-OF- Duty Mechanics Auto Mechanics "3 S llD CARPENTRY CABINET MAKING Machine Shop Practical Nursing ej the Board PROVO SALT LAKE 20 East 1st Uo. 405 So. Main Affiliate of First Security Investment Co. r REGISTRATION DATE SEPT. APPLY . i - NOW-TELEP- IIOflE g Air Conditioning Farm Mechanics - Building Trades lTpecebry Repair-Paintin- Refrigeration and FICE MACHINES ETC. if j Diesel-Heav- y Business and Commercial Education 'f GEORGE S. ECCLES Chairman WeWing; MECHANICAL DRAFTING ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTING STRUCTURAL DRAFTING SURVEYING ttVr '. i 294 NO. 1st & Draf tlngDesign Tec Iinology I . : . mm Item ! 1 er t - yir. cob-mand- . e, - areal" Victor. Durham, left, NEEDED EQUIPMENT of the Utah County ' Sheriff 's Jeep Patrol, and Norman Smith, chairman of the patrol's current: fund drive to buy needed rescue equipment, display some of the equipment required. Trouble is, however, it's; only borrowed to illustrate the picture. They still must raise, money to buy it. Skimdiving equipment sljiown here! is needed for possible water rescues, and mountain-climbingear is also needed. - j . i f ; " i - (R-Uta- h), Use of land in Utah by the fed eral government for national parks was discussed for Provo Rotarians Friday afternoon by Laurence Burton. ; Governor George D. Clyde was slated to speak to the Provo group, but business concerning the Colorado River Storage Proj ect made it impossible for him to attend. Mr. Burton is assistant to the governor and a former pro fessor at Weber College. Mr. Burton said that Utah has some 84,000 square miles of land which is either, only a fourth-ostate owned.- The reprivately or ' is' either maining three-fourtowned or controlled by the fed; eral government principally in forests, national parks, military installations' and Indian reserva . tions. t Utah's percen, He compared tage with Wyoming with 52 pet cent controlled by the federal government, New Mexico, 45 per cent and Colorado, 38 per cent, Allowing the federal govern-- ! ment to control more lands in na-- i tibnal parks, he said, would encroach upon the development of natural resources, since lajids set aside for national forests or; reserves cannot be developed, He stated that the governor is not opposed to national parks,1 but said that Gov, Clyde is in, favor having a small areas centered around the attraction preserved, father than a Whole section of land. The governor is in favor of bringing more tourists into the: state, Mr. Burton said, but feels; that there needs to be a different approach than turning over more land to the federal government.! He cited the governor's interest; in this matter discussing the de velopment of the state park sys-- ; tern since 1957. n. A visitor to Provo found him - I L J Visitor Made Too Welcome " Statistics j Utah." offi- V - Forging and Blachsmithing Electrical Technology 6th 8 a.m. thru FR 3-78- 90 & p.m. |