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Show Worst Flood In 17 Years 4 14 Press International Stranded hunters beat their way from passes in the northern Rockies today and the worst flood in 17 years unindated farms along Virginia's James River. Gale winds and high tides subsided from New York to northern New England today after the pas sage of tropical storm Gerda. g A cold front which g snow and brought to , North temperatures Dakota Sunday advanced into the corn belt, dropping the mercury 10 or more degrees as it passed. Some 500 hunters were caught in the mountains of Utah and southern Idaho by a storm whfbh By United snow-clogge- SEATTLE (UPI) d f:,j::-::::-:::- '. V H ! j near-freezin- . dropped up to four inches of snow over the weekend. The greatest concentration of the stranded occurred near Burley, Idaho, where more snow was expected. Cha les G. Paull, Red Cross instructor, demonPHLP.A RATION JUST IN CAS Plan Food Drops strates techniques to control excessive bleeding on "patient" James Brady, son of National' Guardsmen and local Mr: and Mrs. Charles Brady, American Fork, Mr. Paull has been the featured authorities took snow vehicles into the mountains to rescue the huntAmerican in the conducted Forkfor Utah County Jeep speaker at first aid classes ers. Food drops from planes were SIGN HIM UP, STAN When coming through a normal Patrol auxiliary and partners. sized door, Don Kohler,. of Chicago, has to watch his planned in areas isolated by head. Don, who weighs 450 pounds and stands 8 feet The rescuers highways. were hampered by breakdowns in 2 inches with a size 22i s hoe, was in Milwaukee Sun- telephone service to the Twin dav for the Toppers convention. ( Herald -- UPI Tele- area due to the photo) storm. The storm. hit after hunters took to the Woods Saturday for the peake & Ohio Railroad tracks in COLLISION KILLS SIX Members of the Central, Utah opening of the deer season in Goochland County, forcing, reroutCOLOGNE, Germany (UPI) "You imust emergency only becomes common FORK to four ing of trains. Utah and Idaho. It left Six persons were killed Sunday know where yojir responsibility sense as a result oi training, in Branch of the Utah Chapter of the feet of snow in some up mountain winds and tides when twp sports planes collided starts and where it stops in ad- addition to discussing first aid tech- National Association of Social areas. 15 Workers welcomed two feet above normal were sub-- j in the air and crashed. students, ministering first aid," said Charles niques, informative films were Snow in also Monfell of parts the at Police said the planes collided area, recently G. Paull, Red Cross instructor for shown on first aid treatment for training jin siding today from Long Island to tana and North Dakota. West Yel- Main a luncheon in Provo. after causing serious dam- - at about 1,000 feet altitude over the Utah Civil Defense School at burns. The event was conducted by lowstone, Mont., reported 9 inches. age in some areas. the Cologne suburb of Hoehenhaus Camp Williams. Arrangements- to have Mr. Paull "Virginia's James River was ex-- , President Robert Gallagher. Mr. Paull is guest instructor at participate with the groifp were A was missing! near the Rhine River. boy Each student was introduced by pected to crest 'ne feet above in the First Aid course being con- made by Mrs. Charles Brady, first author-- j Sound and Long Island westducted for the ' Utah County Jeep aid director and Mrs. Grant the supervisor of the training flood stage today. Virginia's itie? found his boat over-- f SCIENCE OFFICE Patrol Auxiliary by the American Schaumburg, ladies director of agency. The following Provo cen ern highlands had 11' inches of- turned. Numerous other small! SPECIAL WASHINGTON over the (UPI) The Naweekend while rain tropters participate in the training of Fork .Civil Defense. civil defense in American Fork. ) craft were damaged. tional Science Foundation has storm ical north Gerda plowed Mr. ' Paull told the group that The members of the Utah County graduatej students at the Univer of water swirled Six inches of a creation Atlantic. ward the of special ofUtah's school of social through times have changed and first; aid Jeep Patrol have been attending sity streets at Mass., to Quincy, fice the through nation's future The blocked floodwaters roads study techniques have changed also. He courses here for the past week and work: cjiild Welfare and Public octide Flooding Sunday. high for resources science needs and Louisa and in Virginia's Wight, course Assistance in the Department of pointed out that' the correct "com- will complete the Public Welfare; Vocational Reha- Goochland counties. Although few curred in low areas of Hull and research and education. mon sense" action to take in an' Tuesday. the flood Scituate, Mass. Small boats were bilitation Office; Utah State Hos- homes and farmers torn from their moorings and driv Superior, along the leading edge pital: Utah County Child Guid- jeopardized livestock ance Clinic, and Juvenile Court. were moving their animals to en ashore in Quincy and Hingham of a vast cold air mass which Around and About bays. stretched from upper Michigan to There were 33 persons present higher ground. Gale warnings were up on Lake Texas. The flood covered the Chesa at the luncheon meeting. V yfc;iiyrWMKifVrtV'V'ri'lH -- i d snow-blocke- Know First Aid Techniques Urges Red Gross Instructor Social Workers Welcome" Students Training in Provo Falls-Burle- y . Mile-a-minu- te ; : . - -- r ' 10-fo- ot an-nrunc- . 10-ho- ur were-endangere- An L?v MILDRED FR d, HALL B. or FR 46 n ; call received 're- - Adamses, Heber City together cently by Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes-- ; with their families. Greetings Jeppesen of Orem informed them were also given for Mrs. ?Adams that their son, Jay is now under-- 1 birthday, : going training in communications for the granting of tests at S. U. Fort Ord, with the Flight Army Calif. He was also reported in private pilot's license were completed by Grand Wood at Provo good health. Airport. First solo flights were LaVoh R. Cardon of ElPaso, made by Dick Williams, Dennis Tex., has .been visiting in Provo Groo and Robert Bullington. for. a few days prior to leaving Jerry Meir and Myron Rawimson for an LDS mission. On Sunday successfully completed, first cross-h- e was guest of honor at a dinner country flights, , given by Mr. and Mrs. Preston Mrs. Joe. (Marian) Adams of Gledhill,- and atended by a num ber of cousins from Texas and Lakeyiew, who has been seriously ill at Utah Valley Hospital is Utah areas. now repqrted to be improving well Mr. and Mrs. Zeno H. Adams, at her. home. Provo celebrated their weding anMr. and Mrs. Joel C. Barlow-gavniversary at a family dinner ata dinner during the week tended by children, the Clare K. when the Lake Salt family members heard a Olsens, City; ithe of the Barlow's month-lon- g UL; Vernon, report Snarrs,, Kendall Adamses, Orem; Garth tour of the East. Present were Sorensens, Ephraim and Mack her mother, Mrs. Parley Par-risCenterville, the Louis Flemings, Ogden and the Weldon Salt Lake City and Richard Cook of Los Angeles, Calif. Lj A telephone u -- other fugitive, Arthur St. Peter, Bellevue, Wash!, was traveling with Courville and Thomas, but ran into the brush and eluded state patrolmen. Saw Through Bars King County1 Sheriff Tim McCul-loug- h said the men got out qf their cells on the tenth floor of the county-cit- y building by sawing several bars with hacksaw blades. They tied, sheets together and dropped from the lOtli floor to the ninth-floo- r level and entered a : window there. Insidf thpv arpncpd plpvafnr nn. ertor Gerald Pincus, 31, jabbed something into his ribs and said: "Don't move or we'll kill you.' The men took $3 from Pincus an I then ran the elevator to the second floor where they, tied up Pincus, elevator operator Phil Pel-to- n and a night watchman. Fomehow, the prisoners sifted through a blockade of about 100 police officers and deputy sheriffs to get out of the building. -- KEEPING CAREFUL WATCH WASTTTNYITfYW TTrm T-Ji- Federal said ..Trade Commission Friday it is keeping a careful watch on bomb and fallout shelter advertising to prevent possible exploitation of ,the public in the newly flourishing (FTC) when the Negro fell to his business. son . death. Pitmon said Johnson lost his grip and fell screaming 120 feet to the concrete below. Asked if Johnson's death affected him, Pitmon said: "Yeah, it did, but I've got three life terms facing me." Pitmon was gven three life terms for his part in the,terroriz-in- g and rape of three Seattle girls. He was awaiting transportation to the state penitentiary when the break occurred. Two other fugitives, Stephen Courville and Harold Thomas, both of Auburn, Wash., were recaptured on U.S. Highway 10 east of here when their car rolled over during a chase by state police. An O. TOURIST BUSINESS BOOMING Fla. (UPI) business is tourist booming as never 'before; State officials say nearly 10.6 million persons visited ..Florida in the first nine months of this year, not far short of the 1959 full year recTALLAHASSEE, Florida's ord of 11.3 millioni tourists!. Modernize Your Diamond. Latest in up-tdate styling. Let Us o- Mullett Jewelry Center 184 W. FR n3 uiyju o PI o ft W ti mi Li ' . 1 LI : : i Seven pris- oners, including, a society jewel thief, sawed their way out of a 10th story jail Sunday night and escaped during a driving rain storm. '. Five of the convicts were recaptured at gunpoint, within four hours after the break. Another inmate, Lawrence D. Johnson, 25, San Francisco, was killed while (attempting to escape when he lost his grip on ar rope fashioned from bed sheets and plunged 10 stories to his death. None of the fugitives was armed. Still at large were Thomas B. Fasenmeyer Jr., the society jewel thief, and Arthur St, Peter, Belle- vue, Wash. St. Peter has escaped Irom five prisons since 1942. U's your job to keep me in here,' Fasenmeyer had told jail ers earner. "It's my job to try and get out." Two of the mea, Terry M. Strahlmsn, 18, and Richard E. Loux, were recaptured on the south lawn at the jail by two Se- diiie policemen wnr leaped irom their patrol car and leveled Shot guns at them. Caught in Rail Yard B. N. Pitmon, originally from Des Moines, Iowa, and a convicted rapist, Wco rounded up by police in a nearby railroad yard. Pitmon was right behind John" slow-movin- day-lon- g MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1061 Utah County. Utah Seven Prisoners Break Out of Jail in Seattle V Hits Virginia DAILY HERALD , 0 Clflf i J j feir - n e ' u ; La-Ve- re . h, Par-rishe- s, Army Decides Ag a ins Recall Of Some Doctor WASHINGTON '. ' Mrs. Harriett B. Axelson of Salt Lake City is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Charlotte Booth in Orem. (UPI) The-Arm- y has decided against recall- ing to active duty certain physicians, dentists, and veterinarians who are members of the reserve. Doctors affected are those who have already had more than 21 months: active service and ?are not now participating members of Reserve or "National Guard units. ' Such men- Hvill not be recalled. ; - The Army said the exemption did not apply to doctors who or may be rehave been recalled ' i Dastrup.il Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Provo, returned home after two weeks vacation in Fontana, Calif., with son, Richard and family; her sister, Mrs. Edward P. Dow and husband, Santa Barbara; his sister, Mrs. Henry Albretsen, San Bernardino; cousins in Alham-bra- , friends in Pomona, and a reunion in San Bernadino with friends from Lemon Grove and Highland. Permanent wave special. The called' ' as regularly assigned whole works for $6 any time. members of a paid Reserve or" Call Wilma's Beauty Shop. FR Guard unit. (adv.) J 1))! Pi I WW n rp 4 ) - 7 nn " U U 1 t , ' A- : - i: ! & v r. ,y I of He Will Fight to: o Amend the city charter to restore proper checks and balances in city government and control the vast powers of the City 3 i j. J" - - i r Tfc.T A. I J ' I '......"-- 1 o dations. Attract to Provo healthy industrial growth. Augment the Auxiliary Police force. o Keep the public1 informed on long range planning. . f j n nn n t n J 1! LZZ3 . , t y uu Restore proper budgetary operation of city departments. Look at this observation from the 1960 Provo City audit by Olsen, Gardner & Squire, certified public accountants: "During the past year we have observed in several instances expenditures from various funds for purposes. completely unrelated to the general purpose for which the fund is operated.' Restore respect for the City Civil Service and discontinue hiring, firing, or changing status of employees without knowledge of department heads or contrary to their recommen- , 1 u vj Allow department heads to run their own departments without dictatorial overriding by the City Manager. Open all public records to publication inspection. Here Are Some of The Improvements Mr. Morin Will Fight For If You Elect Him To The City Council. Manager. Replace the present City Manager. o Restore proper and effective lines of communication between city employees and elected officials, which are now virtually closed by executive order. Give the City Council greater control over the expenditures and accounting of public funds than is presently permitted by the charter. o Reestablish good public and employee relations. L OA) I ) uUUu i U: U 1 ! ) v ft 0 J' " uvILJu Juo UVj 4 odki 83 Prwf. Distilled from ICfl?J Grain Neutral Spirits. Gilbej's Distilled London Dry Gm. 93 Proof. W. & A. IDO Cm.. 0. Oistiibuted by Hitionif Distiller! Products Co. Si lis Hsatrai Spirits. fiilbej.lM.. Paid Pol. Adv., by Citizens for Arthur Morin; Dean W. Payne, Secretary , |