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Show j Wotherspoon, Bernhard, Dean Scon Crystal Ball 6 j win Provo be like 50 yean from now? ; Says William K. Wotherspoon, manager, Prove of Chamber Co m m e r c e: We'll have our own monorail B YU downand citifrom downto the air- port. There'll be multi - story I Mr. Allen buildings Growth in electronics and diversified Industries will make Provo one of the West's important cities. Air travel will be greatly expanded. Provo Airport will be a busjr center, with a jet commercial airflight every hour. Mr. Wotherspoon and two other Provoans Dr. John T. Bern-har- d and Ronald L. Dean made forecasts in connection with First Security Bank's commemoration of the 50th anniversary of its beginnings in Pro50-ye- ar ve The bank will officially mark Allen Honored A special tribute will be accorded R. E. Allen at the dinner, according to F. V. Nichols, vice president in charge of the bank's central division. Mr. Allen not only has been a customer of the bank since its founding in 1913, but he was the original manager and served in 34 l- - - , BUILT TO FOIL ROBBERS Heavily-barre- d teller's window, contrast to open windows of todayjs banks, was? brought here from Montpelier, Ida. for display in Provo First Security Bank in connection with its anniversary) commemoration. Other displays will feature old andi new coins and currency. j years until ; his retirement in 1945. The Bank was known as Knight Trust and Savings when Mr. Allen became manager in 1913. It joined the First Security system Oct. 8, 1931. "During the next 50 years you $590,-000,0- 4 Madsen Appointed to Key Legal Post for Firm j hie now 00 j ' sas City. V'i i : a complex of 12-st- ory Beck Takes Power Post at Richfield Company residence halls; a powerful educational TV station capable of WilLam L. Beck, former Alpine City recorder, began his duties neta the entire nation; reaching this week as meter superintendent of the Utah; Power and Light work of heliports atop campus Company's Telluiide Division in Richfield. Mr. Beck was appointed to handle helicopter to fill the buildings position left vacant when R. H. Grimshaw, Richfield, ivas flights; an automated food ser- killed in a light plane crash Aug. 7 near Beaver. vice enabling students to obtain A ntoive of and a graduate of American Fork High a wide variety of food items, School, Mr. Beck Alpine has been associated with Utah Power and light mostly in capsule form, from any since 1948. ! part of the campus by dialing; His wife, the former Lois Shepherd, and four children, iwill and an electronic computer center j him in Richfield, where they will make their home. capable of solving any complex join mathematical problem known to tnan and so sophisticated that it Bottling Company of Provo Expands Operation can give instant advice on plays A family bottling business which dates bacK to lob was and formations to football, basketaccoaches and other ball recently when Dennie's Own Beverage Company was during a franchise to bottle and distribute Mission of California bever tual games. Dean's Crystal Ball ages. "What about Provo' s utilities. Henry Denhalter, grandiather of the present owner Byron Pen Mr. Dean, superintendent, Provo halter, began the business in 1876 in Salt Lake City with a hand City Power, says in 50 yeafs bottle washer, filler and stopper. there will be no visible power Byron Denhaltef, who recently celebrated 50 years of married be will home the lines; typcal life, believes that business and marriage have the common denomheated electrically from its own inator: "You get out of it what you put into itj" he says. power plant in the form of a solar cell imbedded in the roof; j cooking will be done by high fre- quency or radiant energy; cooking containers will be disposable; radio sets in the year 2013 will be no longer than a matchbox but quality will be excellent. Mr, Dean adds: "Tomorrow's business executive will conduct more of his business from his home. He will participate in a conference Most brokers felt that Thursday would be a dull session because of the Jewish high holiday, which usually cuts Wall Street attendance. But the large short interest position combined with the President's public plea for the proposed $11 billion tax cut was too much to resist and prices shot higher, industrial pushing the Dow-Jone- s average up 5.36 to a new record high of 743.22, smashing the previous record set last week. The closing session was more vigorous and showed greater enthusiasm and prices closed a tiny bit above Thursday's levels for another record high. Dow - Jones industrial average was up 3.47 to a new record high of 743.60. Rails tacked on 0.32 but utilities eased 0.75. Standard & Poor's 500 stock index rose 0.13 to 73.30, also a new e high. Trading lagged at 24,153,030 shares compared with 27,793,440 shares last week and 17,597,070 shares in the same week last Mediators In ST. GEORGE The new U.S. Air Force Radar Bomb Scoring Unit, moving into St. George in October, will brin; 75 new families into the community. The unit, attached to the First Combat Evaluation Group of Strategic Air Command, Barks-dal- e AFB, Shreveport, La., will electronically track bombers 24 hours a day. This will necessitate the presence of big jets such as the B-52- s, and B-4- 7s B-5- 8s in the St. George area. Government contracts to construct the installation have been let to western firms. Power will be supplied by the local electric company. Seventy-fiv- e highly skilled eval- uation personnel, together with their families, will make their homes in St. George. Experience is valuable. It keeps a man who makes the same mistake twice from admit Benton ting it the third time. The Ogden city council Thursday hired Edward L. Burton; Co., Salt Lake City, to make a study of which type garbage disposal facility Ogden should build and the best means of financing at. City Manager Sam Hood said the Salt Lake firm will complete the study for 1.5 per cent of the bonds the city expects to be issued to j ' w-a- i THE SUMMER FIRST FR 4--1 600 j the 1964 roll campaign over the top. Mr. Wotherspoon reported on a trip to Logan. He was impressed with the efforts which the com munity and the downtown stores had put forth to beautify tihe city; a.'so for the excellent signs established to call attention; to the Utah State University campus and the "Home of the Utah Aggies." Dr. John T. Bernhard reported that plans are under way for en- trance and entrance sign development at Brigham Young; University but said action had been deferred for more pressing? projects in the campus development. The directors agreed to support any move to speed this phase. Mr. Wotherspoon reported the Retail Merchants Cotmcil is making plans for a gigantic "Welcome BYU Students" promotion Friday. The merchants jar planning to sponsor bus service by Utah Valley Transit Co.f Saturday so that students and townspeople may ride free during the day. w two-wee- military MW AGP SAWES 1 IFoliferfD Two wash speeds Three cycles' Three wash temperatures Powerful Spray rinse Water Saver load selector ! ONLY . at For the first time ever this low price Bir-mitictha- m EXCLUSIVE . MINI-WAS- H you automatically wash small and delicate fabric loads normally washed by hand or lift out basket loads refor up to big quiring more vigorous washing Lts FAIR PLANS NEW YORK (UPI) Repre sentatives of many nations and nationality groups met recently to discuss a program of colorful Nationality Days at the New World's Fair. York 1964-6- 5 programs Day Nationality highlighting music, songs and dances of national and ethnic associations, will be held on Sun days during 1964. Visitors to the Fair will view the performances free of charge on a first come. first served basis. An arena, seating 15,000 persons and a pavilion with a capacity of 2,000 persons will be available for the shows.. W(nsEDei? 12-pou- nd " x with operating trad action. And at no additional cost, new MOdel Jet-Sw- irl AUTOMATIC FABRIC SOFTENER DISPENSER 852X for soft, fluffy, easy-to-ir- Buy the pair for clothes on Matching G-- E Dryer only drying system Automatic dry control Synthetic e Fluff cycle Four-wa- y venting Porcelain drum and top High-Spee- d De-wrink- ler .w. a month more SEASON Trod Washer mark of General Electric Company McxUI WA8S2X end Dryr Mod.l DA820X DAVENO AND FOR CARPETING 264 NORTH 1 st WEST-- Ph. i j third -- s UTAH VALLEY FURNITURE j ur fleupihbBsfi IMowi SEE ture helicopters, Aura C. Hatch, reporting for the civic affairs committee, noted recounted efforts by thef group in connection with the southwest sewer project, United Fund, boat harbor, and covering of ah 'open ditch. He said the committee had asked for a study by thef Provo City Parks and Recreations Board of auto speeding on the parrow road through Memorial Park. The board joined in the request. Chairman O. S. Allen, j of the membership committee, inade an appeal for directors to complete to put their calls on follow-up- s by-law- I . ski ana recreational development and efforts to obtain Industrial plants, including o$e to manufac- At its monthly board meeting was attended by 500 members of this week, the Provo Chamber of the Kiwanis clubs in the Utah-Idah- o Commerce board of directors district, accompanied by authorized William K. Wothertheir wives. They voted the con- spoon and another delegate to be vention the best in district his- named to make the trip. tory. Expenses for the trip will be Reporting were Dr. Stanley N. paid from the PED (Provo Clark, president; Wayne Hacking Economic Development) fund adand KeSier Powell. vic Dresi- - N ministered under the direction of dents LeRoy J. Olsen, interna- the chamber. tional trustee and J. W. Randall, who was elected lieutenant-governfor the ocaI Utah division. Boise Club Host Hosts at the convention was the capital city, Boise, Ida. Kiwanis Club, whose members won a round of praise by the Provo In delegates' for vhe hard work put in on program and arrangements. Sgt. Darrell K. Kocherhans, son Planning for the event began last of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kocherhans February, it was reported. One of Orem, recently participated of the outstanding entertainment in the war exercises near Don features of the convention was a aldson Field, minstrel show put on by exceptional talent from the host club. S. C. Garth Boyce, traffic manager Described as for the Mountain States Telephone the largest miland Telegraph Co., was introducitary operation ed as a new member of the club. i n peacetime, He was introduced to the club by the war exerRalph Reed Olsen. cises put emA proposed amendment to the phasis on paras, club constitution and protrooper drops. viding for the election of a presideTroopers in the nt-elect each vear, presented by Kocherhans assault George E. Ballif was defeated on Sgt. five-hoone operation during a 'vote of the members, by a vote came from the 101st Airborne of almost four to one. Division' to which Sgt. Kocheris attached. He was one of hans PROPOSES NEW FARES out of the plane during the first SALZBURG, Austria (UPI) The International Air Transport the air drop. Association (IATA) Sgt. Kocherhans, stationed at today dis' Fort London-Neclosed the revised Campbell, Ky. appeared in close-up a York fares proposed at its k army photograph taken war exercises and the during meeting here. on the front page of The approximate fares: first published class jet, $400, one way; economy Strike, publication class jet, $230, one way; group printed at Spartanburg in con nection with the operation. jet $300, round trip. BOY ; day that Birmingham's racial crisis could move from the streets to the conference table. mediation team apA two-ma- n pointed by President Kennedy will hold a series of briefings with Justice Department officials in Washington the next few days before coming here. And a group of white civic officials here will go to Washington Monday to explain their side of the issue to the President, who Negro me't with Birmingham leaders Thursday. Former Army Secretary Ken neth C. Royall and former West Point football coach Earl H (Red) Blaik, named by President Kennedy as a committee to seek a solution to Birmingham's prob lems, planned to meet this week end with Assistant Atty. Gen RnrkP Marshall, the administra tion's chief civil rights expert. Marshall, who recently left was to brief the two before they meet with the President Monday or Tuesday and be gin their job. Violence on the streets has di minished but flares up Ogden Okehs Study of Garbage Disposal Setup wn made' toward here. Ala. (UPI) BIRMINGHAM, were officials hopeful SaturCity construct it. The survey will determine whether the facility will be paid by revenue bonds oi general obligation bonds. Revenue bonds can be closed issued without a vote of citizens, whereas general obligation bonds circuit from televised by Lonsuch ponts as Hong Kong, require a tax levy and would have to be approved in a special and Rome." election. don, Paris An interesting feature of First Security Bank's commemoration of reach of a man standing in and Mrs. Jacob Coleman, Mrs. will be a lobby display of a metal II. J. Phillips. Mr. and Mrs.' Tony of the front cage. teller's cage which was used in cusMrs. First Brumnjak, Elizabeth Security 1913. West in Longtime the Mountain the Mr. to and and Mrs. J. invited tomers Tuesday Partridge, To Thwart Robbers H. Bean. include: dinner The historic teller's cage was Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Muhle stein, used to thwart potential bank in the century Fern S. Erimhall, Mr. Allen; Sena robbers. Early a were of number there Christensen, Jennie K. Mangum, bank robbers such as Myrtle H Smith, Mrs. Frank T. Butch Cassidy, known as the Bennett, Stella P. Garrett, Edith "Robin Hood of the Rockies." Young Booth, Fern C. Eyring, SENSATIONAL The cage has heavy iron grills. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Boyce, Mr. The grills were so arranged that and Mrs. T. Earl Pardoe, Clark a teller could not shoot through Newell. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. SUMMER SALE the bars on a straight line. The Snell, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Love, WE MUST KEEP OUR teller window cage was so high Hattie S. Moorefield, Mark II. almost out Brimhall, Hermese Peterson, Mr. that the top of it EMPLOYEES BUSY DURING well-kno- Scoring Unit 0 Racial Crisis Li oJJ To Begin Work air-conditio- d; George Jedenoff, reporting for Provo delegation n will visit Los Angeles soon to fol- the industrial division of the low up on the possibility of some chamber, noted progress Jbeing industries of that area locating the Four Seasons Hi I Mr. Madsen went to Kansas City as assistant! ZZ f area attorney in 1958 from New York, where hei Bernhard's Forecast joined Long Lines in 1953. He was associated with 1 and senator state the law firm of Wilkinson, Boyden, Cragun andi Dr. Bernhard, BYU to the assistant president, Barker in Washington. D.C. prior to that. BYU will have a football Mr. Madsen forecast tadium seating 55,000, air con ditioned with a retractable roof; Utah-Idah- o Sugar Co. Executive Will Retire a library of 2,000,000 volumes in Clisbee Kimball will retire as traffic manager for Utah-Idi.h- o which students will check out books automatically by dialing; Sugar Co., Sept. 30, ending 44 years service with the pioneer sufear . a complex extensive closed cir- lirm. As traffic manager, Kimball has been responsible for providing cuit television system enabling instructors to reach students all transportation facilities to distribute U&I sugar in 24 western and over the campus; special campus mid western stales. the walkways year-aroun- two-ma- ' MaHson rnrrHin- ate the department's legal operations in the west- ern area of 21 states, with headquarters in Kan-jij- ; Mr- A Orem Sergeant Participates War Games George Gets Radar Kenneth R. Madsen has been appointed area lattorney for the Long Lines Department of American Telephone and Telegraph Com- year. Of the 1,486 issues traded, 585 .VWL advanced, 149 to new 1963 highs pany. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Madsen, U L reside in Provo. and 736 declined, 47 to new lows. Tn Ki-wa- nis St. all-tim- will see the growth of Provo and Utah County into an area of homes, industries and businesses from the Point of the Mountain to the Juab County line," said Mr. Wotherspoon in his forecast. By he predicted, Provo will 2013, have 125,000 inhabitants and Utah County 350.000; retail sales will be $177,500,000 for Provo and for the county; BYU will have 25,000 students. Utah Valley will be a vacatkmland and draw people from all areas of the United States. Delegates wfrjo attended the International district convention at Sunl Valley last week, gave reports at) the Provo Kiwanis Club convention Thursday noon at the Royal Inn The convention or shares. the occasion at a commemorative dinner Tuesday at 6 p.m. at Riverside Country Club. tiiat capacity for Provo Chief of Police Jesse Evans today announced that his officers during the next week would begin enforcing the city's ordinance prohibiting overnight parking. The police were directed by the Provo City Commission to begin enforcement of the ordinance which has been on the city books for several years. Under the ordinance, cars are prohibited from steady parking from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m. on city streets. Violating cars will be ticketed, the chief Indicated. United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) The stock market lacked enthusiasm this week but nevertheless managed to squeak through to a new record high. There was a lot of milling around throughout the week. Most sessions were characterized by an early morning advance which was gradually whittled away in the afternoon. Analysts' confidence didn't waver, however, and they continued to hold that another breakthrough was near at hand. The Stock Exchange reported Wednesday that short interest had risen to 5,879,686 shares, the largest total since Dec. 14, 1962 when the short position totaled 6,436,215 Provo CC to Send Delegates t To Los Angeles to Seek New Industries for Utah Valley Kiwanians Hear About Convention Overnight Parking Ban To Be Enforced 1963 Stocks Edge Up to New Record High I What town zens town SEPTEMBER 22, Utah County. Utah (SUNDAY What'll P rovo Be Like In 50 Years? Ba nlc Gets Forecasts For Anniversary carrying students SUNDAY HERALD CHAHt 1 1 8 I REBUILT & REUPHOtSTf RED LIKE NEW ! APPLIANCE j MASTERCXAFT'S MATERIAL EXTRA and FURNITURE mi MASTERCRAFT PROVO -I CUSTOM FURNITURE MANUFACTURING CO. FR 3-02- 64 Third South on The Avenue" PROVO Phone FR 3-80- 50 IHIlAll ui trait |