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Show 4 SUNDAY HERALD SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 19C3 Utah County, Utaa Douglas' W; Love Elected -- of U and PpesidonSv Douglas W. Love was elected o president of Sugar Co. during the firm' board of directors meeting Friday morning, it has been announced, ; ' Later in the day, during the stockannual meetholders ing, the firm's J 72nd annual re--' port was t read Indicatine the firm apw its Utah-Idah- ' L ubsf diaries s showea record and earnings Si production for the fiscal year Mr. Love just ended. Mr. Love, executive vice presi dent and .'general manager, re-- Board Asks Utah Congressmen : Sot Discussion On Parle Borders ; Suqcr I Utah's (IJPI) congressional delegation has agreed places J. Arthur Wood who Is re- to meef with National Park Sertiring from 'the - post of presidenC vices officials withlrr "the next 10 Mr. Love will continue in the post days to discuss, boundaries of the of- general, manager.' The board proposed 'Canyonlands National also named Reed Smoot as a vice president.- - He is 'general sales . The date ;of:-thmeeting has. not manager for the firm. Mr;. Wood been set,, but U 'would. be held be will remain a .member of . the fore .a two-da- y conference on the Board of 'directors and a mem- park called for May 1 by Utah ber of ' the executive committee. Gov. George Clyde, Lake During the stockholders meet- City. ing, President David O. McKay, Sen. Wallace Bennett, chairman of the board of direc- announced he would tors, said the season Just ended Sen. Frank Moss, was the best in the company's conference, sponsor of the Canyonlands history. bill now before Congress, said he Financially, after taxes, the net to income of the firm was $2,390,041. has not yet decided whether The previous year the firm had attend. a net income of $1,975,532. net income in the last yearpie is equal to $1.01 per share on 2,371,-283 shares of stock compared to WASHINGTON 10-1in-Sa- R-Ut- ah D-Ut- Butch Proves cents the previous year. During the year U and I "grow ers raised 2,283,926 tons of sugar from Page One) , (Continued beets - a record from 116,214 i. election was for 10 per cent, add- acres of land in Utah, Idaho, ed on 5.26 mills and raised about Washington, Oregon, South Da kota, Nebraska and Iowa? $145,000. now mills It is 3.3 only Why as against 5.25 mills last year? Because the school board has pledged to keep its local district (Continued from Page One) levy for 1963 .at the same levy as 19G2 44.36 mills. To do this, it could not guarantee what practi can add only 3.63 mills on all cal steps the Russians would ac other already established amounts tually undertake to bring peace without exceeding the 44.36 total, to the little Southeast Asian king' .Inasmuch as localtax require dom. Harriman said he ' was "satis ,ments as a result of the Legis school with the result of his talk fied" Nature's . program expanded with Khrushchev and believed he increased. have ' The school board's promise not had "laid to ' rest certain false ; to raise its local levy, however, rumors", Khrushchev had heard has no bearing on the state school about the Laos situation and "levy, which is separately levied American intentions there. :by the state tax commission and The Soviet Union had charged in 1962 was 7.1 mills. In 1963, this the fighting was sparked by Amer could be unchanged, or it could ican intervention in Laos. go up or down. It is not connected Harriman iaid he and Khru with the local levy, and the local shchev also (discussed American school board has no control over military ' maneuvers in Thailand, which borders! ion Laos,' and move t Taxoaver in Vote ment of the U. S. 7th Fleet in the v : "Who can vote Tuesday? Natur region but the matter was not ally, in view of the state supreme dwelt on at great length. i court r decision, only those who He said ne and the soviet Pre mier went ovr a wide range of stttes this eligibility; must be es. International Issues but that the - tablished . by payment of taxes negotiations covered only the Laos ; within the 12 month period pre situation. s You can assume almost every ceding the election. In addition, subject came up, he said. legally qualified voter in other Harriman also told Gromyko the United States was willing to have respect. 1 What Is a taxpayer for pur- - the ICC look into charges that f poses of forces were voting? The Utah attor- National Chinese ney general has ruled this means operating in Laos. Harriman said one who pays taxes .on either real he had assured Gromyko that to or personal property. Real prop- - the best of his knowledge none J erty generally means land and were there now. permanent improvements on that A proposed Soviet "peace ap land, such a buildings. Personal peal" published here Wednesday property means anything taxable charged: that the presence of U.S. not la thereal category. Personal servicemen in (Laos increased ten property can mean an automo- sion and threatened the nation's bile, household furniture, or ac- security. tually anything else taxable that It also complained that U.S. im ; is not land or permanent military personnel have not been on land". that provements Thus, withdrawn irom Laos and de , if you pay taxes on a car, and nounced what It described as con nothing else, you are a taxpayer tinued U.S. military aid to non eligible to vote Tuesday assum- Communists in the Asian country. ing you are a registered, voter A communique issued after Fri and qualified otherwise. day's meeting said Khrushchev Slan Affidavit and Kennedy reaffirmed their sup How do judges of election deter. port for the Geneva agreements guaranteeing Laos' peace and voter will be asked to sign an neutrality, but gave no indication affidavit certifying he or she that Russia was willing to do any : qualifies as a taxpayer under the thing to enforce them. i terms stated. If the voter, should sign the. affidavit and is not qualified, he or she is guilty of per jury. from Page One) r The school board has stated the (Continued of southeastern Cali 63 leeway funds, if granted, will and the areas to lower the fornia be contiguous used for the same purposes as j - were those of the 1962 vote. These Colorado River, include added library books, text-- The market year is divided into to dooss, scnooi suppues, special Rummer and winter seasons of the of diversity take . programs for children . needing advantage 1 seasonal power requirements be servicea neip, special counselling land added psychological services. tween the two divisions. Tn The Daily Herald of April 26, Allotments to both divisions total school officials issued a statement 994,750 kilowatts of power in the in considerable detail on this winter season,! and 971,310 kilo-'issue. wats in the summer. These am ' 83 " Ml W i Too Good A Watchdog . borhood. A v . , Police finally called Young who threw a noose over the . dog's head and gave him a j "Butch cooled his heels In a police cell for a. few hours before his owner was traced," Young said. "I'm afraid the police did not come out of it too well." i " " j ; ; Power I . . 4 ' an1 cTmrvirf aiw)4 lyn have publicly developed over the coming election. The Proro Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors endorsed the school board's request, reversing, a recommendation of its congressional action committee. At a sparsely attended public meeting called by the Utah' County Farm Bureau, those present vowed to attempt defeat of the issue, with J. Rulon Morgan, local attorney and real estate owner, acting as the principal spokes- man against it. ' inci-dently- ,1 " - Mrs. America ounts exceed the 961,000 kilowatts originally estimated as the firm ca pability of Colorado River Storage Project power plants by1 mid-196However, the generating capabili- :y of the CRSp's Curecanti Unit has been revised upward since the original estimate was made, and the extra allocations are further covered by the likelihood that some allotments in both divisions ' probably will hot reach the con tracting stage.; The northern division is to re ceive the balk of CRSP power, with the southern division having a permanent allotment estimated at about 20 per cent of the pro 6. ject's summer capability and T per cent of its winter capability: (Continued from Page One) However, the northern division now is unable to use its full en j nesota, blonde Virginia Firns-- , titlement, permitting larger blocks child mother of three of power to be marketed in the from Rochester. southern division on a i - The second runnerup was Mrs. basis. This power can temporary be recapPennsylvania, Margaret Suber tured hy the j northern divisions, I Price, 30, mother of two from as needed, on three years notice. Stroudsburg. First CRSP power will come from the Flaming Gorge power Bachraa, 34, of Kuneohe, Oahu, in northern Utah. Initial i was voted "Mrs. Congeniality" by plant generation at Glen Canyon power the contestants. plant in northern Arizona, which I Everybody got into the act in eventually will; become the major f the marathon stage production. of the system, is The emcee's wife. Penny Olson, scheduled for June, 1964. Power lost a shoe as she walked across from the Curecanti unit on the 1 the stage and had to hobble off to Gunnison River - in Colorado will tone side to put it back on. Two not be available until the summer r microphones were dead and the Of 1966. curtain became stuck seconds i before the finale. ' AIRLINE POLL f Even the. husbands of the 10 NEW YORK (UPDA recent tinalists came on stage and "Mr. survey conducted among its memI California" had a whimsical word bers by the Airways Club listed about Florida weather. 'favorite" and "least favorite" "It's been mighty wet down airlines. Chief reasons given for here for us," he said, "especially listing "favorites" were "general ' ! at rJht." services," 'courtesy" and "fre- j - power-produc- :: f California Home Subject Of 'Invasion' gi '.."---.- . - r - Pleasant EAGLE ROCK, Calif. (UPI) A strange tale of an "invasion" by a swarm of birds was re-counted Saturday by the Kimmel family. Lawyer Maurice Kimmel, his wife, Adelaide, and their - two sons, Michael, 15, and David, 8, at war" with found themselves the birds Thursday night "We were in the kitchen," Mrs. Kimmel r e c a 1 1 e d. "Suddenly, birds were flying ali around. We looked in the living room, and on the clustered they were in the fireplace, every drapes, Of Cuba Spy Hushed Up way down the Chimney of the family home in this suburban community near Los Angeles. Known as chimney sweeps, the birds dived, chattered and flapped while the familyj tried to shoo them out the door. The family cat, Buttons, was ' called on for assistance. But one ' look and the tomcat ran for his life through : the front" door. , A curator, at tne county muse um explained that swifts often - . looking for nesting places. - Eu-rlpe- FEAR Premier ALGIERS (UPI) Ahmed Ben Bella's industries min- ister said Friday investors should not fear seizure of their plants because Ben Bella,' has nationalized farmland. "The land is nk industry," La roussi Khelifa said. "The Algerian government will piiblish rules with in the next two or three weeks assuring the security of invest er i j 1 i ... an ar Ike Defends His Policy bn Cqstro In Late 1950's Neo-Fascis- ts. left-win- g- M. , ot beyond recognition. They were taken to the Veterans Administra tion Hospital at Albuquerque to await positive identification by a medical expert from Wright-Patterso- n AFB. The Air Force said the nine dead were: Griffith; Capt. John J; Howley Jr., co pilot Arlington, Va. Lt Col. Ned (Edward) W. Springfield, Va. Renlck, R." husband McNeil John Capt. of Betty J., McNeil, Denver; son of Mr. and Mrs. . Gilbert V. McNeil, Orange, Calif. Tech.- - Sgt. Herald N. Williams, Columbus, Ohio. Airman 3C. Barbara E. Cole, Travis AFB, Calif. Tech. Sgt. Garnet H. Garnas, North Highlands, Calif. Army PFO Gary D. Fulbrlght Company A, 1st Battalion, Ft. ' Bennlng, Ga. G. Fireman Curtlss, Roy Navy U.S.S. Evans, Port Longbeach, co-pilo- t,l "" Exquisite Corsages Steelworker Union Kennecott Orders Not Planning to $2 Million Ask Wage Hike In Diesel Truck: SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Ken officials 'said today the firm's Utah. Copper Division has placed a $2 million order for a fleet of diesel trucks for the Bingham Canyon open-p- it mine. ' Twenty trucks were ordered with necott more to be ' purchased later. officials said. The new trucks will replace trains for carrying "overburden from the upper levels of the big pit. 60 necott's Utah Copper D,i v 1 s 1 o n Thursday night honored its SO and employes. Division 'General Manager J.P. O'Keefe said 14 men were honored for 30 years service to the com pany and 206 men received tribute for 20 years with the firm. The hardest part cfeout a tough jEiartea.. mw Job is lfmtsh-In- g getting T Say "I'm thinking of you" with a Bouquet gift. nnanvw cctnlon, kvery tary-treasur- er " ' . 1 73 YEARS of SERVICE! Most of our business comet through people we've thoughtun fully served. The reason derstanding, sincere guidance died Monday: funeral was Saturday; Sam Smith, 86, of 1978 Major St, died Friday; funeral Monday noon, 2128 S. State. Frank A. Mor-gah 69, of E., died Frifuneral day; Tuesday, 10 a. m., All Saints Episcopal Church.! Daniel E. Lybbert, 83, of 2217 Texas St., died Friday; funeral Tuesday noon, 260 E. South Temple.' n Fanny Jackson, 80, of 925 McClek land St., died Thursday funeral Monday noon, LeGrand LDS Ward . ' '; , Chapel. OGDEN Walter Tilman Rich-ardso78, died Friday funeral Monday, 1 p. m., Llndquist and . Sons Mortuary. MIDVALE Edith Anderson Dahl, 92, of 84 E. 7500 S.,! died Friday; funeral Monday, X pi. m., 8090 S. State. LOGAN William "Curly" Loh-ma80, died Friday. BBIGHAM CITY Zina Lovlna Jensen Andersen, 83, died Thursday; funeral was Saturday. William D. Morray, HEBER 79, died Friday; funeral Monday, 1 p. m., Olpin Mortuary. SLATER VILLE , Weber County-He- nry Charles Meyerhjffer, 79, died Friday; funeral Tuesday, 1 p. m., Lindquist and Sons Mortuary, Ogden. For Woman n, 470-13t- Mor-lesso- .. n, I . n, NORTn PLEASANT GROVE Funeral services and interment will be In Texas for Ima Jean Hoke Jones, 35. of 125 E. 500 N., Pleasant Grove,' who died Friday in the American Fork Hospital. She was born March 20, 1927, in Fred, Tex., a daughter of Robert and Emma Moore Hoke. She married Harvey Jones in SUlsbee, Tex., Feb. 7, 1946. They were later divorced. Mrs. Jones moved from Texas In October of 1959. She had been employed as a supervfeer at Utah State Hospital -- in Provo. She was a member of the LDS Church. Surviving are a daughter and two sons, Judith Ann, Fred Clark, and Harvey Brian "Jones, all of Pleasant Grove; her mother, Mrs. Lev Hare, Sillsbee, Tex.; a sister, Mrs. Elbert (Gwendolyn) King, also of Sillsbee. ra 7S Texas College today gave in to the fair sex and agreed to admit women students on a limited basis starting June 1. . The school's board of directors Voted to open the college to worn en ending 92 years of tradition as a military and mechanical col lege for men. , ; OydeV Thompson of Diboll, a member of the board, said women students will be admitted to the graduate school and the school of veterinary medicine. Wives and daughters of faculty members. of students in residents and wom en staff members will be admitted to the undergraduate program. There are some 1,800 married male students attending Texas STATION, A&M Dies in Charleston CHARLESTON. Wasatch County William Heber Wlnterton. 88, Charleston, father of Mrs. Lorin Wright of Provo, died Saturday in a Heber hospital of natural causpg- He was born Oct. 4, 1874, in Charleston; a son of William and Ellen Widdison Winterton. He married Agnes Webster Feb. 15, 1899, In the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She died Jan. 2, 1943. He married Lucy Jacob Balrd Feb. 24, 1947. A farmer by occupation, Mr. Winterton served as director and president of the Charleston Irrigation Company for 40 years. , He was an active member of the LDS. Church. He is survived -- by his widow, uiariesxon; six sons ana caugn-ter- s, a stepson; 30 grandchildren, four broth" ers and sisters. A&M. Funeral services will be conThe board was unanimous in its ducted Wednesday at 1 pan. in decision to admit women. the Charleston Ward ChapeL Women will be admitted as Friends call at the Olpin Mormay "day" students. No housing Is tuary in Heber City Tuesday ever available at this time for and Wednesday prior to servThe board did not discuss a hous nlng ices. Interment will be In the Charing program. leston Cemetery, 71 great-grandchildre- I co-ed- s. Provoan Elected To Head Utah Sertoma Clubs Olpin-Sundbe- rg Mortuary Orem BOS WELL, N.M. (UPI) The regional convention of Sertoma, a service to mankind" organization. urged Saturday that Irving Geysel of Cheyenne, Wyo., be elected In ternational President of Sertoma in 1964. Geysel is now international vice - president. The . " convention ended six-sta- te Saturday night with a banquet and dance. At the final business meet, Gene Benson of Laramie was reelected district governor for Wyoming and Montana, and the following new district governors were chosen; Chet Rutherford of Albuquerque, for New Mexico and El Paso, Tex.; Bev Woods of Denver,! for Colo rado; Dr. Keith Whatcott of Provo, CARD OF THANKS We desire to express our sin cere appreciation to the many , friends and staff of State Hospital who assisted in any way during the recent passing of our beloved Husband and Father, Archie Sumter., For the beautiful flowers,' the expression of sympathy, the assistance of those who took part at the services, and other acts jof kindness, we especi ally extend our thanks. The Family M Archie ,' ' - ," ... - Sumter,- - mm Shell Aston funeral service will be held Monday 12 noon In the Lindon Ward ChapeL Friends may call at Mortuary, Pjeasant Grove Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Monday prior to aerv ices. Interment will be In Pleasant ' Olpln-Sundbt- rj Grove Cemetery. BERG MORTUARY SERVICES Ronald Kent Anderson Springville 6th Ward. Friends may call at Berg Mortuary of Springville. 525 E. 400 So., from 7 to 9 p.m. and Monday tintil 10:45. Interment will be in Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 inghland prive. Salt Lake City. Edith McGregor services will be held Monday at 12 noon la Provo h Ward Chapel. 6th E. 2nd North. Friends may call at Berg Drawing Room Chapel 6 to 8 Sunday. Interment will be in Aultorest Memorial Cemetery funeral 5-t- In Ogden. . Ui You Been Waiting For! YOUR V DENTURES Repaired - Polished and ) j Teeth Replaced, etc. Reasoncbls Frkes Prompt Mailing Servict No Appointment Necessary Granite. Mcnumcnti HOUR DENTURE REPAIR SERVICE (Back of Hoboh' ril) j 725 So. State St Ph. m 4-- 65 Phone Tech. Erma Hutchms Palmland 10 Years Experience Beesley Monument and Vault Co. ! SI fu- neral services will be held Monday at 11 a.m. in the nrxni What Have 'yn rg Olpin-Swndbc- for Utah. Gov. Jack Campbell of New Mexico addressed a luncheon ses sion of the convention Saturday. .The convention paid final tribute to James L. Williams, past president of the Roswell Sertoma Chapter, who died Thursday Pleasant Grove Harold Alfpttin funeral Mrvictt will b hld Tuvtday 1 p.m. in tW Or.m 12th Ward Chopl 1500 S. 800 E. Friends may call at th Mortuary Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. and at tho Chopol Tuotday prior to Mrvicct. Interment will be In Orem City Cemetery. 1044 So. Stato St., Orem, Utah i n; WHILE YOU WAIT! m gift UNIVERSITY AVE. phone COLLEGE (UPI)Texas 'XDU you select a fine (BARRE iGUILD Select Barre A Texas A&M To Admit Women v, mm CHRISTIANSEN FLORAL 147 31 - lovely flowors. Provo Fbral West 1st South PROVO FR - can compare with Occasion 1 MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) A top United Steelworkers official said Saturday .his union has no present plans- to ask a wage increase from big 'steel.' I. W. Abel, international secre of the nation's third largest union, said the steelworkers have a wage reopener due May 1. "But we plan to ask no raise now," he said. Anei pointed out that his union had taken no stand on recent price hikes in the in dustry, or on statements , of Presi dent Kennedy on the ' steel situation. ', 20-ye- ar SJM- - ky-ff- N Ken-- SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) ,1 MCA State Bar Blasts Demand for Oaths From es 9 Killed ment." i , officers . ' ' ! . where." It seems the birds the Kim- mels insist there reach the wreckage. sand of them" had found their Many of the bodies were burned ' ALLAYS INVESTORS '61 Shooting his, ; . f-- : -- . - car-truc- Election Today , . . Italians Will Hold General cour-rageo-us -- -- self-defen- se j The friend got out of his left " the door open, opened the door of the garage and then startedj for the driver's seat. There sat Butch guarding it for dear life. "My friend, being a sort of chap whooshed at him but Butch would not go," the veterinarian said. "He also resisted all efforts with various garden implements, so my friend called the police. When the police arrived, tires squealing, the dog leaped out of the car and ran away. My friend thanked the police and they turned to .( leave, "There was Butch, sitting in the police van." Butch impeccably on the job guarded th police car all night. ! .' ' ' Texas Rites Scheduled Thursday; funeral was Saturday. Car! D. LoKIn, 90, former resident, Merry-Go-Round- car, 1 To Provoan ' fma Jean Hoke Jones SALT LAKE CITY Niels Peter Schow, 86, of 1216 E. 18th S., died OREM Funeral services for Harold AHphln, 22, of 717 E. 1G00 S., Orem, who died Friday will be C ... V '1 . . LINDON Funeral services will conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the ' $. Wright McGregor. 43, be conducted Monday at noon in Orem 12th Ward Chapel, 1500 S. I Edith 154 N. 200 E., died Thursday in of r ; ' 800 E. the Lindon LDS Ward Chapel for a Seattle, Wash., hospital of ap- Shell Aston, 66, who died Thursday Bishop. Floyd Johnson will offi parent in juries ..rrr,f,,'i received at his home in Lindon of a heart ciate at the services. . - in a Friends may call Monday eveattack. k collis- s Friends may ning from 7 to 9 at the Olpin r ; ion in Provo r: call at the Olpin- - Sundberg Mortuary in Orem and April 15. Suridberg Mor Tuesday prior " to services at the At about 8:06 tuary in Pleas chapeL . a. m. on April ant Grove this "Interment, will be in the Orem s 15, the car driv' Ky . City Cemetery. evening from en by Mrs. Mc to 9 and Mon-- d , Gregor collided a y prior to with r the rear of i services. Inter a corn-bottling the Mrs. McGregor p an y truck Grove City while It was stopped at a traffic Mr. Aston Cemetery, v light at 500 North and University Mr. Aston was born April 1, Avenue, according to a Provo po1897, in Vernal, a son of John F. lice report. 'Investigating officers and Mary Harris Aston. He mar at the time said ; Mrs. McGregor ried May Noble Aug. 27, 1918, in uninjured and complained appeared Prove of no injuries. He worked all his life as a farm She was taken to a Seattle hosWASHINGTON (UPI) The Deer. Mr. Aston was a member, of fense the hushed Wednesday when she became pital up Department the LDS Church. i while ill Guana at visiting a daughter, Mrs. of Cuban spy shooting Surviving are his widow, Lindon; tanamo in SeatUe. the and Naval Base Aljean Peay, ' five sons and two daughters,, John ouster ' A ofoffice spokesman coroner's four of Marine Aston, Orem; Theo and Don Aston, ficers involved in the Corps said an autopsy revealed that Mrs. incident, both of Lindon; Maurice Aston, columnist Jack Anderson charged McGregor died pf a blood clot in Riverton: Mrs. George (Zora) the lung traceable to the auto acci Clark, West Jordan; Mrs. Roy Saturday, : ,'. ; Peardent.' Drew who with Anderson, (Blanche) Manning, Salt Lake son ," Mrs. McGregor was born Dec. writes "Washington City, and Horace Aston, American was shot 1914, in Paradise, 31, said the Utah, a spy Fork; 22 grandchildren; two great In four offl- -, daughter of Hershel and Beatrice and the grandchildren; a brother and four cers "were railroaded out of the Swinyaard Wright. She married sisters, Leo Aston, Provo; Mrs. Marine Corps1 without a formal Joseph Leslie McGregor in the Salt Brad (Vilate) Shumway, Airs, Wil and were warned to keep Lake LDS Temple June 25, 1934. liam (Irene) Shumway, Mrs. Ethel hearingmouths She attended schools in Malad, zippered." Gordon, and Mrs. Floyd (Elva) their, deDefense The completed her senior year Ida., Department Cordner, all of Orem. clined comment on the Anderson and graduated from BY High in story. However, the Navy on Oct. Provo. She made. her home in 17, 1961, acknowledged that the Provo following her marriage and body of a Cuban employe had had lived here since. An active member of the LDS been found in a shallow grave at the Guantanamo base and investi Church, ' she had worked in the Primary for many years and in gation was being conducted. Anderson identified one of the the MIA as Era Director. She had been leader of the ex Marines as then Capt. Arthur . Jr - ceptional children's group for the wlnof Honor Medal a Jackson, ner in World War H. He wrote PTA. Mrs. McGregor was known for that Jackson found Ruben Lopez, More than 34 known to naval intelligence as a her willingness ROME (UPI) to help others. million Italians will vote Sunday Castro spy, in a restricfed area at are her husband, Pro Surviving In crucial general elections that the Gantanamo base. vo; a son and three daughters, Jay will decide the political future of Jackson shot Lopes to death, C. McGregor, Albuquerque, N, M.; Premier Amintore Fanfani's ex according to Anderson, when the Mrs. Louie (Joan) Guldo, San perimental "opening to the left." Cuban sought to grab the Marine Diego, Calif. J Mrs. Eugene (Al and Mon Their balloting Sunday s captain's gun. jean) Peay, Seattle, Wash., and day could affect Italy's relation The columnist wrote that Jack Edith Bene McGregor, Provo; six ship to the North Atlantic Treaty son and a companion, Lt. Wil- grandchildren; her mother, Gar Organization (NATO) and the de five brothers and a liam A. Szili, - "foolishly Common Market. It will cided to dispose of the body" lest land,' Utah; H. Wright, Seattle; Albert sister, test the strength of Italy's Com Fidel Castro make an internation- Preston S. Wright, Garland; Ed munist party the largest in the al incident of the shooting. H. Wright, Kaysville; . John ward western world. They obtained the help of three Fred Wright, Salt Lake City; Italians can approve Fanfani's other officers and six enlisted Frank M. Wright, American Falls, year-ol- d experiment by voting men in' the effort, Anderson said. Ida., and Mrs. Richard M. (Vivian) either for his Christian Demo The result, he wrote, was that Anderson, Provo. crats, their Socialist allies or the "Four of the were Funeral services will be con smaller moderate leftist Republi drummed out " of the corps, the ducted Monday at noon in the Procan or Social Democratic parties. fifth was allowed to finish his vo Ward Chapel with Bishop Fifth They can say "no" to it by vot two-yehitch. The enlisted men Alma Nielsbn officiating. Friends ing for the Communists, constitut were merely disciplined." may call at Berg Mortuary in Proing the second most powerful sin vo this evening from 6 to 8. Intergle party in the country, or the will be in the Aultorest Me ment right-win- g Liberals, Monarchists morial Cemetery, Ogden. or Socialists 'of Ple- The third biggest are Nenni the , tro Last in year Fanfani, party Italy. leader of the t Catholic Christian Democrats, ' gave his ' . party its "opening to the" left" by allying BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (UPI) It with the Socialists in parlia ment for. the first .time to form Former President Dwlght D. - coalition," Elsenhower Friday night defended his "center-lef- t Fanfani told the electorate that administration's position SALT LAKE CITY (UPDA de a voting swing to the right could against Fidel Castro in the late mand by the Utah Welfare Comsplit the country in .two and drive 1950's. mission that juvenile court judges He said the United States would the Socialists back into the Com Socialists have been "Interfering with an affirm their loyalty to it has trig The munist camp. formed a common front with the other American country" if it gered a blast of criticsim from communists in 1948. sought to check Castro in the late a Utah State Bar Association of1950's when his Communist ties ficial: Rex- - Hanson, past president of were not clearly defined. "I don't think I can speculate the bar, said such a demand was on that," Eisenhower said at a the exact thing the association (Continued from Page One) news conference when asked to was trying to prevent in its pro Griffith of comment, in retrospect, on wheth posals to separate the juvenile Col. was Lt. Ray-er he thought it was possible to courts from commission control. Va. Ft. Belvoir, The bill pproposed by the asso which are 6,500 stop Castro then. A reporter re The Sandias, to sever the commission ciation to attribrecent ferred remarks of west of the village feet high courts and died in the last Utah to 10,688-fouted to to President the Placltas and rise Kennedy after receiving support effect. Legislature that overlooks crest which Albuquerfive from state's the is juvenile court set You fruitless. to no "Speculation place que, provided V must judges: America was took hours remember three down safely. It to get trucks and ambulances up very sick of a dictator named 48 miles of switchback roads to (Fulgencio) Batista," he said. , this had led to complications. The other night, ' for instance, he told a meeting of the British Small Animal's Association, a friend came home late from a party and encountered Butch who just happened to be 'jln the neigh- : ; Utah Obituaries - LONDON (UPI) Butch, a a is bulldog, good watchdog too good. Veterinarian ML Young said Butch was trained by a man to guard his truck and that Harriman 'Rih ah, Funeral Services Apr. 15 Crash Sot Tuesday f or Harold Allphin, 22 Hurts Fatal Monday Rifos Slated for Shell Aston v 225-5- 6 ' S3 |