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Show nrUHSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1D51 DAILY HERALD Utah County, Utah iTABLGQITG n O r6 o lf" mi. y astro sroDuloritv V'V":.v. "y'fi:. V 0 jMilDUUUl!! Quart ' S h ovs Rap i d Decl i n e than ever before. True, the critl looks over his shoulder before h By MILTON CARR United Press International j ESunGan Mines Lqyds N. 7 for For some time now, Fidel Cas tro has signed off his marathon speeches in Cuba with the words: "Fatherland or death! We shall triumph!" But will he? Will the great; popularity he has enjoyed with the Cuban masses during the last two and years carry him through the months and years ahead? Will the Cuban- - people stand for having communism rammed down their throats, even by their national hero? These questions are being asked in Havana today as well as in other parts of the world. There are no pat answers. But there 1 s x II .;- 57i -' speaks. V The strong arm which defends Castro and discourages uprising and invasions is the militia hun dreds oi thousands of armed men and women who train in their spare time and vow to fight to the death to defend the revolu . WAIT 7 JIILII Jll p HAPPEN n S - ) 2)'(5JlJlli 9 m syrups There is ho doubt thai Castro has Tost popularity during the last year, particularly the last four months. His formal announcement on May 1 of Cubans entry? into the Communist bloc, the currency month during which last change the government confiscated $35.5 million in cash from the- people, anq the current food shortage all havje had their repercussions. aiore are likely to ceme. .The government now corols 85 per cent of the industry and 50 per! cent of the agriculture. The only remaining private enterprise in Cuba is in the hands of the small farmer, business man and merchant. TheV, too, are scheduled to be gobbled up by the socialist system. But while it was" relatively easy to confiscate the holdings of foreign companies and wealthy indiand viduals', it will be harder f.o more peopleto mofe painful take several thousand small businesses- from their owners. How they will react to this, is something for Castro to consider. - . Hog. $1.18 - 7rvn HJi J SyK-j J USDA CHOICB ( Lm 1 I I r If. 1W A) ho . r. i 6 err1 , f TABLERITE USDA CHOICE BONELESS i "sS- - T nn ' ... J Ground 4ff ' i . . . i! - X 'if y x ... " I ji (o) 7 Cut and IVrapped If TAilLIllFRESH- IPCS' ' y " 1 yMrR n n n n n n n . . fe:Li:U :....' . divorce pro- ' - 15-min- District before Taylor Judge Wines, who granted the divorce, thst "I .wouldn't say I'll never work with him again." The rift between Miss Smith, 29, and Prima, 48 one of th country's most famous night club and recording teams hsd been long rumored. William Woodburn, a Reno attorney, filed Miss Smith's divorce complaint and said it charged c . ss . pulpit. But in Roman Catholic at Newport, Va. Cuba, the church despite government interference may prove o be the greatest bulwark against Sovietizatioir. L. Religion is the only organized force in Cuba which Castro, has been unable to subduo. The traditional religious street processions have been restricted. Parochial schools have been taken away from the church. ,But churches remain open, and the faithful deplore what is happening. SALT LAKE CITY (UPD Th Salt Lake City Commission has Castro's rallies no longer are approved plans for a $10 million bringing the spontaneous turnuot fallout shelter beneath the Metrotha. they once did. An effort is politan Hall of Justice. now required to attract large ' The action was taken today on crowds. Streets no longer are de- a shelte that will hold 400 persserted a night vhen Castro ons underneath the proposed makes a radio and television building, j speech. The. commission has agreed to Despite the secret police, volun- include plans lor a shelter tinder teer informers and he omnipres- the plaze of the new structure, as ent militia, one can hear more an alternate proposal when.-- the criticism of Castro in Cuba today plan is submitted for bids, J. Estimated cost of tbe building is $53,650. The cost could be in- Half-Broth- er eluded (in the proposed total of the building, Public Safety Commis'' sioner Herbert F. ' Smart said. The alternate shelter will cost estimated $76,586. It will be included if there is. sufficient money Approved , - - e . T USDA CHOICE TABLERITE nJi2 business-lik- ceeding. But "deadpan Miss Smith said after a closed hearing Is 2 DfeSo " brusque, Fallout Shelter Plan 0 ' VEGAS (UPI) Singer Keeley Smith and band leader Louis Prima ended their nine- -' year, marriage Tuesday, in a LAS S. i ;i Marriage iron-fiste- ' 4 Singer, Band Leader End Prima "caused her great unhap-pineand injured her health.'" The transition to communism in Madison Graves repreCuba is . moving so rapidly that Attorney Prima. sented thei majority of the people do not I've never5 "I'm nervous, in yet realise what is happening. ) been so nervous,? fact, the singer said But among those who are aware as Wines' from she emerged of the implications, there is , a chambers. growing dissatisfaction with CasA spokesman for Miss Smut d control tro, though his said she had obtained all .property of the populace precludes public and custody of the couple's rights criticjsm children, Toni Elizabeth,. 6, and One influential public voice Luanne Francis, 4. He refused to. against communism was silenced discuss other details of the "set" when the government forbade tlement. priests to discuss politics in the The couple was rhatfrieo in 1952 V - f.f-S-, d ( 4 rr 3- v J - i v P r. ft ' j ,J. x , eonomy Size X . l ft USDA CHOICE . ' : i tion. The government's greatest sup port lies within the underprivi leged group, and particularly ithe farm . workers which represents the majority of the Cuban popu-- f lation. , : Castro is not neglecting the battle for the minds of ' the Cubans, His words and slogans are every where. They blare from sound trucks, from radio and television are indications. sets. They hang in red letters on : Up to now Castro has won banners, on billboards, on beer every battle, including that, of an trucks even on palm trees, , ; armed invasion supported by the The all government newspapers, United States. But as he draws contain operated, nothing but the Cuba farther along the road to or Communist line.. communism he faces internal government, Communist publications dominate; problems which may be harder the bookstands. to overcome one-ha- lf .a n JV. L'll J'V'LaI .... "" n ATLANTA ' -' ' . terson, 'UPD-ol- m halt-broth-er ld A. Peof D-G- a., . . available Kennedy Names Group to Study Election Finance! Sen. Herman Talmadge, killed himself with a pistol shot Tuesday . after seriously wounding his wife, police said. Mrs. Helen Peterson was reported in 'fair condition from bullet "wounds in the hip "and back, WASHINGTON (UPI) Presiaccording to police. dent Kennedy today named a' lb. - . , 'Of Senator Shoots Wifer Himself i ... . ; nine-memb- er bipartisan commis- sion to study the financing of presidential elections and propose n ways of meeting mounting f cam-pa;g- expenses. Another majoi aim will be to, relieve presidential candidates of what Kennedy called their top-hea- dependence ( W ' fl - - " LOOK' - trciPP'A f- - A DOLLAR WILL BUY! BEVARE OF KM IMITATIONS LOOK OR THI f MAPPY LITTLE y:: ,. . Lj C)j: . C(Csu-- LjtJ -- far y vy on big cam- paign contributors: Named as chairman was Alexander Heard, dean of the gradu-- i at school at the University of Isforth Carolina and a leading authority on the problems of campaign financing. , NEWS CONFERENCES .'h;f.1TfcJ DOG WASHINGTON (UFI) Prcsi (lent Kennedy plans lo hold newss conferences on a more regular basis, from now on, according to pr&s secretary Pierre Salinger. Kennedy has scheduled a news conference for next Wednesday. He has held 15 in Wa&hicg-td- h since his inauguration Jan. 2), with the latt one cn Auj. 0. , ' : ; TOPS LOO IN QUALITY! ! PPACC |