OCR Text |
Show DAILY HERALD JULY 26, WEDNESDAY, Utah County", UtaJi 1961 Around the State Leads Opposition By WILL BERNARD Peter, a factory worker, was walking toward the stockroom when he bumped against a partition. The impact set afire a package of matches he had in his pocket, causing him to suffer a painful burn. o Parallel Parking SALT LAKE CITY (UPD Opto parallel parking is spreading from Salt Lake City to other Utah communities. J. Edward Johnston, deputy director for planning of the state highway department, said objection to the parking op State Street in Salt Lake has resulted in similar objections in Springville, Kaysville and Grantsville. And, he added, the department has detected rumblings elsewhere. "We are going to haveto be firm," Johnston said. The department insists that state highways passing through urban Jareas be limited to parallel parking; He added that a state traffic position Outlook For Peace Talks In due course, he put-ia claim for workmen's compensation. However, the company saw things differently. "This accident had nothing to do with his job," argued the company in court. "He didn't need those matches except for his own personal use. As a matter of fact, we evenhave a rule against' smoking in the plant." V c "But they don't have any! rule against carrying matches," retorted Peter. "So it's not as if I "was doing anything wrong. I'm as much entitled to compensation as any other injured worker," "The purpose of the compensation law," said the company, "is to cover injuries arising out of the man's job. This injury didn't." cArrTIL?oETR.ENTITLED T0 WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION? Weigh both sides. Then, mark your verdict. YES ( ) NO ( ) For the actual court decision, see verdict elsewhere ' on this page. count indicates that traffic has increased as much as 33 per cent on State Street since the switch to parallel parking. The overall increase was about 18 per cent, ,,, he said. .1 . CITY SALT LAKE (UPD Ed- ward R.. Tuttle, payroll auditor for the State Insurance Fund and a veteran governmental employe, 1 . resigned Tuesday, Tuttle said he wanted to "devote time to other interests." The resignation becomes effective Aug." 1. Tuttle has served in city, state and national government for 16 years. During thati time he held posts of chief deputy state treasurer and chief deputy state audi' tor. . r Identity Of Two Victims In Las Vegas Crash Uncerfcm DENVER (UPD The Bureau of Reclamation invited bids today for a control system for valve outlets on the Flaming Gorge Dam of the Upper Colorado River Storage Project. Bids will be opened here, Aug. j Held Brighter 31. i The system includes a control The cabinet, oil tank, piping, brackets LUGRIN, France (UPD French-Algeria- n accessories for two' and outlook for the hollow as jet valves. peace talks brightened today a to new. try 'the two sides agreed MURRAY; UPD --U reward of approach. was offered by Murray May $200 The Algerian nationalists acor Ray P. Greenwood today for cepted a French proposal that information leading to the arrest five committees be formed to of persons responconviction tackle major issues more or less and sible for the costly fire at Granite simultaneously, and In detail. store fire July 12. furniture The French argued that only Firemen and police found "defthin way could the talks be saved to arson inite evidence" from the collapse which overtook as cause of the pointing fire. $300,000 the first round after three weeks slashed Vandals furniture had speech-making- ." of "high-- s ounding and carpeting with knives and apr inflmable liquids parently Rebel acceptance took the inside thespread store prior to setting French by surprise. It was; the the blaze. first agreement registered since the two sides 'first met at SALT LAKE CITY (UPD The in May. Utah Professional Council TuesThe basic difficulty still cen- - day urged that Salt Lake City - i !A - ! t it J submit to the voters a single bond s f II. . Claim on ine oanara ana on proposal which would provide comFrench insistence on political plete sewage treatment. guarantees for the 1.1 million The council passejl a resolution 1 Europeans of Algeria. asking that a measure be includDuring the Evian talks it was ed in the September bond election hinted the French would be that would provide enough money willing to grant Algerian Sover- to build a treatment plant meeteignly over the Sahara in ex ing the standards of the Utah Wachange for adequate safeguards ter Pollution Control Board. lor the European settlers. The , commission has decided to break the sewage bond into- two parts $5 million for the first unit and another $5 million for comple tion of the plant. 66-in- ch ; I . Evian-Les-Bai- 1 A. 1 ns A- M . I Astronaut Gets 'Minnow Club' Membership Card Minuteman FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPD The Fort Worth YMCA Tuesday awarded astronaut Virgil L. Gris-soits "Minnow Club" eard and badge for swimming 65 to 70 feet rhen he left his space1 capsule! . The organization said the award would have been higher but it j BACCHUS, Utah - (UPD A new cannot lower test standards to in- flight' test of the Minuteman misclude the use of a" buoyant space sile is scheduled at Cape Canaveral within a few days, it was anSuit.;' y' M nounced ' Tuesday, Col. Samuel Phillips, director of the Minuteman program in the Air Force, said the shot was to be made "within !a' matter of m Flight Test Scheduled j Utah Ranks High In Voting Survey days." v SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) The past presidential election's voting percentages were won by. Utah, Idaho and New Hampshire, according to a survey of the Metro-politicLife Insurance Co. Idaho and New Hampshire had 81 per cent of their voting - age population casting ballots. Utah had 80 per cent. The national average was 64 per cent, which set a new recojrd. In 1956 only 60 per cent voted. an i Publisher by Herald Fourth poration, 190 West North Street, every afternoon, Monday through Friday. Sun- - ' day "erald published Sunday morning. Entered as second class matter at the post office in r Provo, Utah, under the act jf March 3, 1879. Subscription terms by car- tier in Utah County: Per month $ 1.73 6 months in advance . . $10.50 One year in advance . . $21.00 ' By mail anywhere in the United States or its posses- sions: $1.75 per month; $10.50 for six months in. advance; $21.00 for a year in advance. Herald telephone cumbers: For editorial, circulation, advertising and sports call FR for society and news briefs, can FR Orem office number, Cor- " j i AC Key Largo to Key West, Fla. R. A. La Pointe and R. H. Kingston, owners of the company, stand beside one of their signs on the Overseas Highway.' Herald-UP- I ' ? Telephoto). Lola Melton, 44, 'Salt Lake City. Police' declined to r divulge the name on. the other set or of either set carried .by the man. The crash? occurred on U.S. 91 about 45 miles south of La Vegas. It was within a few miles of a spot, where 11 persons lost their crash June 80 lives in a head-o- n in Nevada's worst traffic accident. One-yea- r old Tina Marie Curtis, of the fatally injured daughter Intermountain Briefs Vet Patient Yellowstone Fires Girt Of C on i so In Crifical 'V MAMMOTH, Wyo. (UPD Fire mission should direct a nuclear fighters gouged a fire line com- coal research program. e forest Van Zandt in a statement obpletely around a fire in western Yellowstone Na- jected to Senate-passelegislation tional Park Tuesday. They said which added a $5 million atomic it was "contained but not con trolled."; Another small fire was put out in the area hear park headquar ters and a small blaze-- in the northwestern corner of the park was under control. But a fourth fire, also in the northwest corner, Iwas still out of 350-acr- d Two Workers Killed At I Gleri danyon - . PAGE, Ariz. (UPD The explo.. Rep. (UPD sion of a pipe took" the lives of said James E. Van Zandt, two workmen at Glen ' Canyon Tuesday the Interior Department and not the Atomic Energy Com- - Dam Tuesday. Ardis C. King, 35, a carpenter-welde- r from Glen Canyon City, was killed instantly when the explosion drove metal fragments into his body. He was! cutting; the pipe while working on a s form block support when it exploded. His; rodman, Keith Walker, 19, A Page,; died later in a Page hospiSALT LAKE CITY (UPD suffered in; the request by Mayor J. Bracken Lee tal from injuries ' r that criminal complaints be filed blast. ,r':. Three .. other; carpenters were against certain past and present city commissioners was denied to- treated for minor injuries. day by the Salt Lake County Attorney's office. County Attorney Grover Giles CSU said that as a result of his investigation no violation, of any criminal nature had taken place. Lee charged several commisCedar CEDAR CITY (UPD sioners with violating budget law of and Southern the College City requirements. WASHINGTON R-P- a., Giles Rejects Lee Request , cqal research program to a bill providing $95 million for electrical generating facilities at a Hanford, Wash., reactor. He said experiments on new uses of coal should be handled by the Office of Coal Research in the Interior Department, and prom-- , ised to introduce legislation which would accomplish this. -- r, ' Carbon County Tax Valuation Drops 4 Per Cent She was reported In good condition at a Las, Vegas Hospital.! Investigating officers said the auto carrying the unidentified man 1 Youth Injured In Yellowstone To Be Released Condition. Idaho Worker Lucky Man - 54-ve- PRICE "(UPD , The assessed valuation of Carbon County dropped about 4 per cent last year, vjp.H. Young, county; clerk and auditor, compiled a valuation' for the state tax commission. It showed the value of properties totaled $36.7 million this year, compared with $38.3 last year. - This was a drop of $1.5 million. The report indicates a large portion of the loss is due to a three-yea- r depreciation rate on improvements allowed by the commission. ADAPTABLE TRAILER READING), Pa. (UPI) j and possibly the woman was on the wrong side of the highway when it collided with the north bound Curtis vehicle. ' Two other autos crashed into the wreckage of the vehicles after they collided, but their occupanti escaped serious injury., Officers said the Vehicle which collided with the Curtis auto was registered' to a James Mc Laugh-lin- r MAMMOTH, Wyo. (UPD A 17- Heppner, Ore., but . that Mr. year old Logan youth, who was Mc Laughlin was not in the veseriously burned when he fell hicle, J into a scalding geyser "pool in Yellowstone National Park,, will FORT DOUGLAsj (.UPD A pa- be released from the Mammoth tient at Fort Douglas Veterans Hospital this weekend. Doctors said Robert Davis, son Administration Hospital was in of Mr. and Mrs. Lehi Davis, re"critical" condition early today covered much faster than expectafter being found Tuesday night ed., in Dry Creek Canyon. He suffered second degree burns Lloyd A. Norris, about 54, had on the WENDOVER (UPD-Wil- lard J. legs and back when a thin been missing from the hospital Morrow a is of crust in the lucky manj way gave ground for seven- days. lie apparently old Jeroire. TdahaJ The 10 was suffering from dehydration remote Shoshone Geyser Basin worker construction was, laying, Faithful." and malnutrition and attendants miles southeast of said he was in shock early today. rtor ran over both his legs in tht AT THEIR AGE! He was found on the Fort Doug- ' pelvic region. HARLINGEN, Tex. (UPD las military reservation by a Salt State He was to rushed Tooele by amagents raidLake man who notified police. ed theliquor control bulance where puzzled doctors pro shop of the Harlingen Norris was taken to Latter - day Golf Course and con- took three sets of picture! Municipal Saints, Hospital for emergency fiscated 200 cases of beer no bones wert before deciding right treatment by military police, tfien in : the midst of the' life Begins broken. The damage: n multiple transferred to the VA Hospital. 40 Golf tournament. abrasions and contusions. .. at Major Clifford Head, ' provost Marshalat Fort. Douglass, said Norris had been missing since 1 July.' 18 ar . x-ra- y . Carbon College Eyes Increase PRICE XtrPD Director Claude boat trailer that supports sail- J. Burtenshaw reports that Carboats and . powerboats alike on bon College expects, an increase balloon , rollers has in enrollment during the coming been developed by the Parish year; He said enrollment is expected Pressed Steel Division of the ' to be between 500 and 600 this Dana Corp. ITlie trailer can be converted to year. Last year, the college had e students and 100 hauling by 430 quick attachment of a cargo body. night students for a 530 total. He said stress will be placed on Utah thave reached ;a :..t tentative The body .makes a campsite shela when whole learning process this or canvas the' sleeper agreement on the Hotel El Esca- - ter . roof is added. year. .j lante. .;,'-- .) .The school will lease the struc ture; with an option to buy,; for THE VERDICT student housing: The city council will review the Yes. The court said an injury "arises out of" a man's job lease agreement at its next meetif it occurs while he is at work, ing before a final decision is made on terms. The Utah State Univerdoing nothing improper. sity board of trustees! also wants (State laws vary). we're out," "Either we win or ' (Copyright 1961, General Fea- to study the hotel before deciding he added. to purchase it for CSU's use. tures Corp.) v V ! r mm A new ; To Lease air-inflat- j ed y:yy:-yiyy- y y;yyyy:y- i7 y : Ceclar City Hotel all-seas- all-purpo- full-tim- on ; . , Reader's Court - t . ... i . YEARS;', i i South Korean Regime Reveals First Execution s The SEOUL, Korea (UPD South Korean military regime today disclosed the first executions carried! out since it seized power in a May 16 coup. The Justice Ministry announced that three Communist spies convicted by the Syngman Rhee regime were executed July 11. They were identified as Kim Jung Ja, Han Chang Woo and Oh Jung Adding Alachincs Lowest Prices ' ' SPRINKLING SYSTEMS FROM 40. CO Hand and Electric RENTAL PURCHASE PLAN Lloyd's Typewriter CRAGMEAD j j Pr UMBING S3 & No. 2nd W. HEATING FR u'Aa X. ' il 1 ,1- Ml&M l -. : i mm -'- - : r r - I i t r 'i 1 ! ,'4 f P J j! I s I i f 't VJ ( x " :f- U .... V ', .CT. 1 Lump all old bills together and shoot 'em to usr Ve pay them off with a quick and convenient cash loan. Just pick up your phone, then pick up your loan. ' -- iiz 03 S2OOO 75 .c Oct a r?': i vf n rs -- n ts. no FOOD WASTE DISPOSER 5 CITY FINANCE CORPORATION Marvin t. Whit, Mgr., 184 West 1st North, Provo Ph: FR Lloyd Orvin, Mgr., 15 East Main St., American Fork Phi SK HU Cono Fitld, Mgr, 134 South Main St., Springvill-P- h: Leant bolow $600 mod by City Finance Company I No mof messy garbage socks r eons food wosft goes down the sink "quick o a wink!" G-- Super-GrinDisposall even grinds bones, ond fruit rinds In second. E 32 corn-cob- 'H ! 1,1 .... rnor vnrR5 '1 i L ! See your authorized GE BOO NO BWCREASE'!BW PRICES that means years! And to celebrate Echo Spring is now in a rich new clear-cu- t crystal design Jbottle that rejects its greater age and flavor! Taste the difference! d s, 44 39 f J Everybody shooting holes in your paycheck? 025 to J 7 ... - I :!;. - ciuukdun " J l- i- -- ECHO is older! ECHO is "7"! And ALL TYPES FREE PLANNING SERVICE! EASY TERMS 332 West Center 5f. -- ' Phillips was in Utah for ground breaking ceremonies', of Air Force Plant, 81, which Willi produce third stage engines for the solid fuel intercontinental ballistics missile. Two previous flight tests have been made of the missile, One was termed a complete , success. A malfunction marred the second test and it was destroyed by the range officer when j it left course early in the flight. Forster,, president of Her cules Powder Co., which will op erate Air Force Plant 81, said at the ground breaking; his hope -was that the eventual product of the facility need never be fired in an ger. But he noted the United States cannot afford to be second best "' i, , f in missiles. Jeun. Company FLORIDA AROUSED In anticipation of Fidel Castro's 26th of July celebration in Cuba, the Keys Advertising Co. of Kendall, Fla. has posted nine of these huge billboards on U.S. Highway 1, stretching all the way from control and potentially dangerous because of its almost inaccessible location. - LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPD The identity of two of four persons killed in a four-ca- r collision on the Los Angeles-La- s Vegas highway souths of here remained uncertain today as .authorities in two states continued their investigation into the accident. . The two identified victims were William M. Curtis, 20, of Salt Lake City and his wife, Rose' Marie, 21, . an expectant mother. , L Police said positive identification of the two others fatally injured in the mishap, a man and a woman, would be difficult because each had two sets of identification. One set of papers carried by the woman identified her as Mrs. . i. dealer today! REPEATING... now in ITS 40 FnLLiormi DOTTLE! A VALUE WORTH irt&icHT KENTUCKY osjRoi twtsKty. ? fABS cifi'ii noot (UHO trm$ PUT. f3, if afiyitu. ttt. |