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Show Tclephonp FR ' i 3-50- 50 f i; j 1 P W M VI y to occasionally cloudy today with a cnance or showers. A uiue For 'Ads., News, Circulation: ProvcOfflce,-19- 0 afternoon' with in creasing winds. High today near cooler Uiis W. 4th N. Orem Office, 737 N. State .........I ..I ' ' Low tonight near 80. PRICE 15 GENTS PRO VO. UTAH' COUNTY. UTAH, SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1962 VOL 40, NO. 2 . ru mi9 oumty s TLlDOlrQ ..Utah 50." T . I ... Valuation to now n ncrease Utah County's assessed valuation is expected to be about $1,681,851 due largely to upping up of Provo valuation County Assessor Guy Jvins 'said Saturday. While the county is still completing totals on boat registration it appears county assessed valuation wfll be state-requir- ed . - Defense M V' For the Postponement f"' (UPI) A new revolt Romulo Betan-couPresident against big-- , Venezuela's at erupted 70 miles about naval gest base, west of here, and the government cut off the rebmoved quickly-tsources said Satels, authoritative urday. The rebellion, second within a total city valuation of $26,363,521. was reported centered at month, At the direction of the state Cabello base. It was Puerto the tax commission, which is. seeking . led by Lt. Cmdr. Medina being to bring assessed valuation into Silva was believed to involve and line more uniformly as regards a battalion of 400 marines stapercentage of market value, as- tioned there. sessment on buildings was inHowever, the uprising apparentcreased by seven per cent this did not have the backing of year east of University avenue ly other forces stationed in the City and by nine per cent west of the of Puerto Cabello. avenue. The government did not issue Valuation Breakdown any immediate communiques conProvo's assessed valuation Ihis firming the revolt, but official year included 1106.95 acres tf sources said army troops from residential real estate, $2,454, Puerto Cabello and the City of 783; 402.81 acres of commercial Valencia, to the south, was movland, $1,378,783: 4983.97 acres of ing into the area around the naagricultural land, $355,485, and val base to seal it off. improvements $15,407,654. Water, electricity and other Final figures will be available services and supplies to base next week, said the county have been cut off, sources here assessor. said. The naval installation was reported completely under' rebel control but authoritative informants said it was "presumed" that warships commanded by loyalist officers had succeeded m heading out to sea before, the rebels could seize them. , The exact time of the uprising was not immediately known. But official sources said "something happened over; there Friday ' ALGIERS (UPI) Algiers was night." a peaceful and quiet city without Betancourt far away It fear early today. There were no from caught the capital. He was reported plastic bombings, no mortar in Merida, in the westernmost and no senseless street kill- sector of the nation where he had ings. gone to deliver a major address y Europeans and Mos- before the National Association of lems breathed a sigh of relief as (See REVOLT Page 4) the "truce" proclaimed by the Secret Army Organization (OAS) went into its third day. For the past two days there has been no bloodshed by terrorists in Algiers. It was reported that the outlawed OAS and Moslem rebel leaders havex begun direct negotiations on Algeria's future. But the truce did not apply to other Algerian cities. Eight persons were killed in terrorist atWASHINGTON (UPI) The State tacks Friday and one was wound- Department expressed regret Sated, bringing the 1962 toll to 5,320 urday Nthat Iraq has ordered the dead and , 10,061 wounded. U. S. ambassador to leave the The OAS, which has been re-- i and had ' ren country (See TRUCE Page 4) called its own ambassador to CARACAS Provo's Increase Provo's tentative assessment this year is $24,877,456, as compared to $23,161,007 last year. By JERRY LANDAUER In 1961, state assessment of United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Gen. utilities, mines and interstate D. Eisenhower will carriers was $2,779,639 making Dwight rt 1 ri ; "mount the cross and you can !put the nails and spear" in him if his Treasury, secretary ever did - "anything dishonest. Eisenhower made the vehe-mestatement at a news con- ference Friday. He "was respond-- I ing to Senate investigators attempts to determine whether George M. Humphrey's M. A. Hanna of; Cleve-- . company, land, got unconscionable profits 'from deals with the national stockpile program during the administration of former President Harry S. Truman. Chairman Stuart Symington, said his special investigating subcommittee was ' pressing an audit 'of three nickel and smelting contracts the. government held with the Hanna firm and two .of its subsidiaries, One of the contracts, Symington said, carried a clause preventing the government from auditing the firm's financial statement, Charge Angers Ike The former president, his face flushing, told reporters who asked about this that "if Secretary Humphrey ever did' a dishonest thing in " his -- life, I'm rea'dyto mount the cross and, you can put the nails and spear in me. "I will never believe he did a dishonesi thing ia his life." " The Hanna contracts ,w ere nt ex-secret- L D-M- ol, f f i signed Jan. 16," 1953, afterEisen-howe- r had selected Humphrey to be his Treasury secretary. Eisenhower did not take office until four days later. Humphrey was said to have retained stock 'i In the Hanna firm while in his Cabinet job. The stockpile program, Eisenhower said, "operated under laws enacted long before I got there." ls At last count, ,65 of the 92 exceeded the stored amount that would be needed for war. The excess has a three-yea- r been "valued at $3.4 billion. Consultant Fired In another, development Friday, stockpile consultant John D. Mor- ;gan was fired after accusations (See IKE COMES Page 4) ma-eria- ! i I . Truce Brings Peace, Calm to Algiers at-tac- ks War-wear- U.S. Envoy Ordered to Leave Iraq , Mid-Easter- n X A r &g Red Guards wo-da- n A teen-age- oil-ric- J , high-altitud- '1 &4 POLICE REMOVE DEMONSTRATOR One ' of 54 sit-i- n demonstrators U.S. nuclear tests is shown being- placed on a stretcher, a "jYoga" type position. The affair took place at San JFrancisco's Federal Court Building protesting the crew of the trimaran, "Everyman." All tests and the arresting of the three-ma- n were removed from the building; on stretchers, one by one at the end participants i of the second day. ag-ains- t - j r , 1 high-altitu- Justifies Price Hike Nikifa Refuses to Cut Soviet Defense Spending Premier Ni- appealed to the Soviet .people tonight in a nationwide radio 'address to understand and support his government's decision to raise prices sharply on meat and butter. Khrushchev . said the Soviet Union had a meat and butter shortage and had to take drastic measures.. ' The Soviet premier appealed to all classes of Soviet society for "correct understanding" of the measures. MOSCOW (UPI) kita S: Khrushchev . j Mother, Three Children Killed "There was other way out," nor Exchange Workers Put In Overtime NEW e f radio-astronome- YORK . Street t ? ; Am-bref- e, said the fire occurred as the mother was fixing breakfast on the stove.! He said the gas, light and heat in the apartment had been .disconnected because Hiltonen was "unable to pay utility bills. He works as a garbage collector for a private firm. Ambrefe said, the stove exploded and fire Cspread through the apartment in seconds: anti-clima- x. ? . , 35; . "grin-and-bear-i- t" - INDEX U -- - : 9A-11- A - '", , A-6- A - - as a "graduation present." Kathryn was graduated from high school eight days ago. joined the grup in California for the return trip for. a vacation with . her, relatives in Coast West Mrs.-Barraz- a - '"' Iowa. erniece her 12; Kathryn Juanita, ,v ;;'; Visib&ty Is Poor The wreckage. of, the plane, a Cooper, 18, of Melrose, Iowa, and ' Mrs. married sister, John Ormsbee said the visibility is Cessna. 180, was found Saturday. her of Alhambra, the Flagler area at the time of Kit sCarson County Sheriff E. G. (Delores) Barraza, " the crash was about 15 feet. Heavy Ormsbee said Che crash was "the Calif. ' worst accident I have ever seen Mrs. Cooper, the pilot, had taken clouds, fog and scattered rain' Kathryn along on the trip to the storms covered the eastern plains by far." killed.-;:-- ' j. J . . . . ! . Former Navy WASHINGTON An (UPI) a Connally, employe of Billie Sol Estes once' Secretary John government invesrtigators conservative, appeared Saturday old to have won Democratic nomina- tbey were wasting their time betion for Governor of Texas over cause Estes was "quite influenh. tial in politics," according1 r to a Don New Frontiersman long secret Agriculture Depart... j Returns to the Texas election ment report. The report was oin- - ' bureau from 229 of the state's 254 counties, including 175 com- piled by department investigators' last summer and fall and has plete, gave Connally 449,612 votes been kept under, a confidential to Yarborough's 429,340. of the events seal, although many Yarborough's margin, in Harris it describes have been revealed County (Houston) where he lives during investigations of the Texwas only j about 11,000 votes.1 an's' cotton planting and goyern- Connally and Yarborough ran ment grain storage activities; first and second respectively in The report said P. E. Bigger-sta-ff a field of six Democrats in the of Bonham, Tex., an Estes', first DemocratiePrimary May 5. salesman, told the Investigators The Republican gubernatorial that "Estes was quite influential, candidate- - is Jack Cox, 40, who in politics.. He (Biggerstaff) was left the Democratic party about a sure that any problem Would be. handled, politically. He doubted year ago. i A victory for Yarborough would that the" government investigation was going to have any effect on have enhanced " DALLAS (UPD B. , . Yar-boroug- -- 140-pa- Republican chances in the November general election, because it would have given the voters a choice between a Liberal Democrat and a Conservative Republican. Texas although heavily Democratic is generally conservative in political thinking. . Four Killed In Cdl6mdB Plane Crash FLAGLER, Colo. (UPI) A light Ormsbe said the plane was "a women two and airplane returning of junk" and; that all four two girls home to Iowa from a heap vacation " in 5 California crashed bodies we're decapitated: A. "J. during bad weather In i a wheat The victims were Mrs. a 42, Chariton, Cooper, (Juanita) t field four miles from the Flagler airport late Friday. All four were Iowa, businesswoman; her daught- -- , John Connolly Estes Sought Nears Win In Influence Texas Voting In Politics past Hil-tone- n, r, 14-pou- Staff (UPI) workers of New York and Ameri'He claimed only a raise in can stock member exchange prices could provide the funds firms made ' unfamiliar Saturday necessary to boost the nation's journeys into the Wall agricultural production to the re- area, bent oncatching up with quired levejs. some of the details left after the The Central Committee of the most hectiv trading week since Soviet Communist party Friday 1929. announced a 30 per cent average There "was no trading. But tradincrease in the retail price of posts were manned, and broking meats and meat products and . a Offices had staffers availerage 25 per cent hike in the retail price to tear into the mountain of able , of butter. work and to answer queripaper "Not a single Communist will es' stemming from the trading of agree that we should lessen ex- 40,560,000 shares on the New penditures ' on the nation's de- York Stock Exchange the fense," Khrushchev said. week, .in only four days of tradThe Premier made the speech ing. to a Soviet-Cuba- n youth friendThe week ended Friday on a ship meeting. But, the bulk of his sort of words were clearly aimed at the seemed mild: 5,760,000 . dealing shares, Soviet 'people. about 2 million more than what Speaking at a Kremlin friend- has been th6 normal day's tradship rally for 1,000 Cuban farm ing through most of 1962. Yet it students, Khrushchev said the1 was a. relaxing drop from the "enemies of socialism" would frantic pace of Monday, Tuesday have" liked the Soviet Union to cut and Thursday. back on defense spending and pour Reflect Prices Trend the money into agriculture. Stock prices reflected the eas"This will never happen," Khrutrend. They wereoff slightly, ier said. shchev in most cases. Most fractions 25 was He commenting, on the ended about where they alrleaders 30 to per cent increase in the were when the previous week eady-high prices ior meat and closed. American Telephone and butter. Pravda said the increases were Telegraph was 111; Anaconda "temporary." . Moscow radio said 43; Bethlehem Steel 37; DuPont, General Motors' 50; the Russian people "approve the 21414; Standard of New Goodyear measures." Muscovites polled- - by Western Jersey 51; U. S. Steel 52. The indexes reflected the way newsmen expressed resignation and a attitude, that the trading had .evened out Tass said 5,000 young men and after the overcrowded sessions of women from Moscow and 1,000 Tuesday and Thursday, The Dow Cubans- - attended the rally. The Jones average of 30 industrial agency said the Cuban students stocks" was" 611.05, "off 2.31 from had just completed courses in the Thursday's close but only 0.83 Soviet Union and are returning down from the close of trading the previous Friday. home ' Khrushchev took the opportunity Standard & Poor's index of 500 to send his "best wishes" to Cu- - stocks was 59.38, off 0.25 from (See NIKITA Page 4) (See EXCHANGE Page 4) he said. de ' j ne . " e ' four-engi- Washington. Iraqi N took the action in protest over the fact that President Kennedy received the Nambassador A BEVERLY, Mass. (UPI) from Kuwait at a credential presmother and her three small entation ceremony at the White young children perished in their apartmeHouse Friday. nt-today when a portable gasThe Iraqi embassy here issued oline stove exploded in flames. a statement calling the act "unPolice said the father, Edward friendly." 24, jumped to safety HUtonen, A State Department spokesman window' a from of the second floor said the order that U. S. Am He second desuffered apartment. bassador John D. Jernegan leave burns about the upper body Iraq means "further limiting by gree and wasMn fair condition at Bevcommuni of channels of its Iraq cation with countries which retain erly Hospital. . Dead-- wereXMrs. Charlotte a desire for friendly relations." 23,J and her three children, The department said Jernegan would leave Iraq very shortly but Cheryl Ann, 3, xLinda Jean, 18 it gave no specific time. In his ab- months, .and Deborah Lee, 3 sence, the U. S. Embassy in Iraq months. Deputy Fire Chief John L. will be supervised by the charge orities of Utah and Wasatch ounties was Wilmot Mann, 50, 1077 Prospect, Salt Lake City. 'His disappearance was reported to officers by his son, Robert Mann, who had accompanied him on the opening-da- y fishing jaunt. The younger man said his father had last been seen at a" point d'affaires. Communist BERLIN (UPI) about four miles above Vivian Iraq said that Kennedy's recepguards shot and wounded a teen- - Park and had crossed-thof the Kuwait ambassador was tion river aged West Berlin girl Friday night near the railroad tracks in that ,"an uncordial act toward Iraq." V 'and dragged another r ' Iraq on June, 25, 1961 claimed '; 'TV area. across the border. West Berlin Kuwait as part of its territory. ' Mr. Mann was described by his This was after the British gave police reported today. f h The Red guards fired at least son as five feet six inches in up sovereignty over the tiny kingdom. two shots at the girl, height, weighing around 140 Since then, Iraq has recalled its Berlin police said, hitting pounds, with black hair and brown . West ambassadors from Jordan, Iran, her in the hip. Her He was wearing levi trouseyes. similar Japan; V and Lebanon on companion was seized and taken ers, tan ."waders. tan and shirt, iounds. behind the barbed wire, He also wore a vith hat light The West . Berlin city council blue somewhat similar stripes, of current details today promised HERALD talks with the three Westerncom-taandan- to a painters hat. over .the question of The Utah County Sheriff's office Amusements . communist reported they had sent some at News shooting Business back ' pie n guards who fire on refugees. to aid in the search as soon as Central Utah tl There was no reply to the Com: ."News 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 was received. The Utah Classified the report munist bullets Friday by .West ..U Berlin police who were about 200 Highway - Patrol also reported Comics ;.. L..10 car:on scene. the the "a scene from the and having By 'yards time they reached it, .' the Bed being in the process of sending National,' World News 2, 8, 12, 7A guards had disappeared 'with their more.' Authorities' of .Wasatch Obituaries wounded the girl captive, leaving County were directing the" search Society .T.?.,,.. .. 2 "on the ground. 'area in which Sports since the efforts ., .13, 14, 15, 16 The incident occurred about - tn"1 in rmM 9 the man was reported lost was in Stocks :10 pjn. on the American-secto- r their jurisdiction. West Berlin Girl Shot By Prince Philip Ends ttle Stay S In Blast, Fire wasre-porte- d from a fishing party near VivSaturday night ian Park in Provo Canyon. Object of an intense search by auth- gathered to watch the awesome display had dwindled to a hardy few by the time the final postponement announcement w a s made. Leftists Protest 2-D- ay Thousands of leftists and students protesting the tests demonstrated in Tokyo before the residence of Prime Minister Hayeto Ikeda and the Ui. Embassy. In San Francisco, pacifist demSEATTLE, Wash. (U P I) onstrators ended their second day Prince Philip of Great Briiagh of protests against the arrest of visit! to y a concluded the crew of the trimaran Everycrew Seattle Saturday and took off for man. The craft's three-maintended to sail into the test zone, Vancouver B.C., at 2:44 p.m. but was intercepted under a fed- PDT, piloting his personal alr eral court injunction nine .. miles plane, a shocking pink Heron. off the California coast. "His Highness, the Duke of EdinBritish French Japanese, Australia, Soviet and German scien- burgh, was expected to arrive in tists have also objected to the Vancouver 50 "minutes' after he e test, primarily de- took off from the Boeing Flight signed to study effects of blasts Center air strip at the King on the earth's magnetic field and County airport here. Takeoff followed an:, inspection Van Allen radiation zones which of the. Boeing company's space surround the planet. laboratories. Highest Ever The Prince spent Friday visitAt least one of the series of three or four tests was to be ex- ing the Seattle World's Fair. Friploded at an altitude of about 500 day night he spoke at a meeting of the English Speaking Union. miles, the highest ever. Scientists want to find out Saturday morning he visited the whether such blasts, University of Washington. School out and radio radar,' of Fisheries. by knocking The Boeing visit,' including a could create an electronic smoke screen for sneak atomic attacks lunch of filet mignon, completed or if they also could be used "as his stopover here. a defense against intercontinental The Prince, an ardent fisher missiles. man, appeared to be most intria British Martin Ryle, gued by the sight of a pool of said the Van Allen belt super trout at the fisheries school. fish brought a look migh be "so badly bent that it The may never be quite the same in of anticipation to the-- Prince's ; face. my, lifetime." But U.S. scientists said the Van He was interested in every deAllen belt has been disturbed by tail at the school,-buit was these solar flares but quickly retued super trout, an experimental to normal, and then expected it stra'm; that is being developed at to do about the same after the the institution, which held his, atnuclear blasts. tention the longest; X - te A Salt Lake! City man missing v. o , Fisherman Reported Lost Saturday Near Vivian Park The first in a series of United HONOLULU (UPI) States nuclear tests; in. the skies oyer Johnston Island in the South Pacific was postponed Saturday and rescheduled for Saturday night at 10 p.jn. (4 a.m., EDT; Sunday), t The Atomic Energy Commission office confirmed the postponement buteclined to disclose any reason for it.' The test had been scheduled for 10 p.m. Friday night, but was put off repeatedly. The hundreds of Hawaiians .. $19,865,169. Of Humphrey s4 Erupts In Venezuela about 5112,673,048 (exclusive ot d mines, utilities and interstate carriers) as compared to $110,991,197 last year. In 1961 total assessed valuation of the county was $131,173,280, in eluding the state assessments of state-assesse- Jo I New Revolt I Ike Comes No Reason Disclosed iP 1 ge the outcome." " But the department ;hat canceled Estes' transferred cotton allotments for. 1962, ruled .his 1961 allotments invalid and filed a $554,000 penalty claim against him for growing cotton without a ,; I valid allotment. ' Estes is also under, indictment on fraud charges.-- ' The report also said: The late Speaker Sanv nay-buif Texas, received complaints about Estes in late 1900 and asked for a report on his rn : cotton dealings. the AgriculHenry'' Marshall, The plane was a white four-pature Department official who -- was sehger1 .craft with pink and black found mysteriously shot to death trim. The wreckage was found just last June, suspected Estes' " deals as the Colorado Civil Air Patrol were improper and asked a counwas launching a widescale search. ty farm official to help gcttvi-denc- e. The plane left Trinidad, Colo., When; the investigators' went to. Friday, afternoon fon a flight to flatly' LaJunta. Mrs. Cooper did not file Estes and his aides,, they ' a flight plan, but said she would denied wrongdoing and said Esfollow U. S. 350 to LaJunta. She tes would appeal to Agriculture, gave Akron, Colo., as an alternate Secretary Orville L. Freeman end stop. No further word was heard. President Kennedy if he had to. of Colorado Friday. s- - |