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Show DAILY ncixALU TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1961 4 Hunters Lost-I- Utah Wilderness ' By United Press International rive home. They were Richard Another attempt was made to j Medina, 15, and Itich-r- d Alvarado find a California hunter missing 20r and his brother, Jimmy, 19. in the snow swept mountains of They were expected home Sunday northern Utah today and. authori- after a hunting trip but failed to ties feared that three" more hunt-er- s show up. also were missing. Weber County deputies pressed i. their search in the Monte Cristo Three Salt Lake City youths area of Ogden for Frank north who reportedly intended to hunt in the Duchesne area failed to ar- - Mendez, 31, Reseda,' Calif. Idaho authorities also continued to free marooned deer hunters in that state. StQte Briefs The situation in Idaho was considered more serious than that of Utah, where all hunters were accounted for except Mendez. Two men were reported to have 'died from exposure in Idaho and two were missing from hunting par' ties. A helicopter aided the search for Mendez Monday but was unable to spot him in six hours. In OGDEN (UPD The Ogden po- another part of the state, near St. lice chief has called on the county George, a man was killed by a, to supply information on how much stray bullet. Lawrence Adams, 31, St.George, CapU Robert F. Carver s training has head of the crime laboratory was shot Monday while he was deer hunting. An attempt to, get cost. Chief Golden Jensen at the same him to a hospital in time failed. time assigned Capt August Nuss-bau- He was dead on arrival .at St. to temporary duty as com- George. Loss of blood was listed mander" of the detective division as cause of death. Missing in the area near Burley and Lt, A.M. Garside to new duwere Clint Hilling, 32, Bur-leIdaho, on ties. Garside had been put paand Floyd Dorsey, 19, Paul. trol but was ordered by the Civil The two men who died in Idaho Service Commission to be given were Fred Reed, 34, Aberdeen, duties equalling his' rank. Jensen said he wanted Carver, and Frank Hayden, 42, Heyburn. who now is head of the separate county crime lab, to tell him how much; was spent on his training. County Attorney Maurice Richards said Carver could not supply that information but that the attorney's office- could. Ogaen, Weber Squabbling On Crime Lab " m y, More Snow Falls In - MOAB (UPI) nett today Sen. Wallace Ben- The Rockies Needles visited the -- area of San Juan County will officials of Grand and San Juan counties. Weekend weather violence abated in most parts of the nation today but more snow fell in the Rockies, vhere two persons died and three were missing in severe storms. Virginia's James P'ver was falling today following the r worst floods in 17 years. The stream remained several feet above flood stage in Richmond, but "continued dry weather" today was expected to end the high water threat to the city. SALT LAKE CITY 7UPD Utah will spend $89,347 to help in improving 10 municipal airports. . Commission .Aeronautics said eight of those jobs are in line The or $278,029 from the state. involved are at The airports Brigham City, Milford, Beaver, j Blinding, Nephi, Ogden, Richfield, A. nor'easter which pounded the St. George and the Wayne County New England coast for three days airport.,. was diminishing today 'after causing tidal flooding and severe small boat damage. The west end of the corn belt got freezing temperatures early today. Parts of Illinois and Indiana had dense fog. .Two persons; were found dead of exposure Monday in the hills of Southeast Idaho, where two others remained 'missing. Authorities, who sent Jeep patrols and National Guardsmen in snow vehicles into the area Monday, could make jno estimate of the number of deer hunters still stranded. A California man was still list- ed missing in the Monte Cristo area northeast of Ogden, Utah, where more snow fell today. However, most hunters caught by the !storm, which hit on the first day of the deer season Saturday, had reached safety today. About 500. hunters were isolated by the Idaho and Utah storms over the weekend. One of them, Beverly Becis, 23, made her way to safety Monday, still clad in tennis shoes, but apparently suffered no ill effects frcn long exposure to the snow and cold. ; Navy Man Loses Leg left leg of a Navy man was amputated below the knee Monday after he wounded himself while cleaning a deer rifle. Darwin Finch, 19, Tooele, was home on leave. He was cleaning the rifle afterhe had shot a deer. He had to crawd to another home to summon help for himself. TOOELE (UPf)-T- he . i ( 'Publishct by Herald Corporation, 190 Wesi Fourth North Street, every afternoon, Monday through Friday. Sunday eraH published Sunday morning. Entered as second class matter at the post office in, Pravo, Utah, under the act ;f March 3, 1879. Subscription terms by car- rier in Utah County: Per month months in advance One year in advance By mall anywhere In the United States or its posses- sionsr $1.75 per month $10.50 for six months in advance; $21.00 foi a year in advance. Herald telephone numoers: For editorial, circulation, ad- and sports call vertising FR for society . and news briefs, call FR Orem office number, 13-da- ' "They forget," countered Ernie, "that it was the conductorsnot I who opened that door. He being in charge of the car, had the responsibility for seeing to it that the coast was clear. He knew perfectly well that the door ler, 62, a railroad man from Sharj-o- opens one foot beyond the side of the car. Yet, he ignored Springs, Kan. my covious danger." Ziegler was one of the victims MAY ERNIE COLLECT DAMAGES FROM THE of the crime rampage that, carried TROLLEY COMPANY? - Weigh both sides. Then mark the youths on a path from Florida to Utah and resulted in your verdict: YES ( ) NO ( ) slayings in five states, Ziegler vrf was forced out of a truck and For the actual court decision, see verdict elsewhere George R. York, 19, of Jacksonville, Fla., and James D. Latham, 19, of Mauriceville, Tex'., face charges' here of killing Otto Zieg- 22nd Soviet Communist party congress, this means Hoxha with Red Chinese backing is to a at the death" "fight aiming to oust Khrushchev from world Communist leadership. County Urged Not To Cbnstruct Joint Shelter zig-za- g r j fti E.NTS Jndge; Benedict P. Cruise already has refused to grant a postponement in the selection of a jury, but the defense planned to repeat its request or. a delay on the grounds that two of the youths' four attorneys did not enter the case until yesterday. The defense said it also was preparing to present psychiatric testimony that this Army had found Latham and York incapable of learning by experience or punishment even before they escaped from Fort Hood, Tex., and launched their crime spres.. They were arrested near Grantsville, Utah. IJvE'S BODYGUARD Retire Denver detective Tommy Gulden, proudly displays a Imedallion sent to him by former President Eisenhower. Golden for nine years Was' the President's bodyguarcj on his Denver visits. The njedalliori is inscribed; "Tommy Golden . . . with deep from appreciation of his many courtesies, his friends, Dwight D. and! Mamie D. Eisenhower." A 1952-196- 1, (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) Intermountain Briefs state-appointe- ed san- three-ma- n d ity commission examined xthe boys last July and reported they should be tried. Attorneys said the psychiatric testimony would be offered only as background and in mitigation. York and Latham watched proceedings' Monday impassively, but they laughed and talked together during recess. Both had Bibles of their own, York's given to him by his mother and Latham's sent to him by a girl in Idaho whom he . Reclamation to Carry Out 'Pumped-Bac- k Storage7 Study By United Press International The InWASHINGTON (UPI) terior Department announced today it would carry out "pumped- back storage' studies in Califor-Valle- y nia's Central Project and in the Colorado River Storag e ' project. Investigations to be financed by a $150,000 appropriation for the purpose also will be carried out by the Bonneville, Southwestern ard Southeastern Power Administrations. Pumped-bac- k storage is the use c of power produced during periods of low demand to pump water back into' reservoirs for release during periods of high demand. The Bureau of Reclamation's first pumped - storage installation was at the CoJorado-TM- g Thompson k where Colorado in Project water to used pump power ii 240? feet uphill from the Flatiron Power plant to Carter Lake. : hydro-electri- x ; off-pea- WALLA WALLA, Wash. (UPD The Rev. Wayne R. Rood, Berkeley, Calif., will be the featured speaker tonight at the opening session of the Pacific Northwest regional conference of the United Church of Christ. The Reverend Rood is a professor at the Pacific School of Religion. The three day meeting at the First. Congregational Church here LAKE CITY (UPD Salt ake County Commission will be urged riot to construct a' joint fallout shelter under the proposed Metropolitan Hall of Justice. Louis Haynie, coordinator of the county's c a p i t,a 1 improvements THE VERDICT No, because of his own conprogram, says he'll make that recommendation, to the city com- tributory negligence at least, in mission. The City Commission had view of his long experience as earlier .voted to build such a shel- a trolley rider. The court said reasonable safety precautions ter. the responsibility of each inare Haynie said he also would recommend the county not Join in dividual, not to be shifted to anyconstruction of addhVonal fallout one else. Injured Hunter (State law's vary. shelter under the civic plaza. (Copyright: 1961, General Fea Reason for the recommendaShows Improvement tions is that Haynie, feels the vot- tures Corp.) DUGWAY PROVING GROUND ers didn't okay the shelters when (UPD A Dugway man was re- they voted for the capital improve--41 rrlLS-( ported improving rapidly today ment bond issue earlier. after he was gored Saturday by a tarn deer maddened b. a bullet wound. 7 '.009:40 Open near was injured Boyd Ward $li00 STUDENTS 75c ADULTS Gurrison in Sanpete County. Ward PLAYING NOW managed to fall away after the animal gored him and shot it again. He was trying to cut its "Closed Tonight" throat when the wounded ' deer him. gored Reader's Court and Utah for spiritual inspiration has never met. and practice in churchmanship. SALT LAKE VCITY (UPI) costing right-of-wa- y made. more to buy It is highway in Utah than was ejt-pect- ed when appropriations were The State Road Commission said the cost for getting title to interstate land is running ahead of the amount set up in nine separate areas. The money is there but authorization to spend it is not, meaning the 95 per cent of the money paid by the federal government won't come when it's needed. In that case the state has to pay all pending federal checks. Richard Clissold, head of the division, said the revolving fund where that emergency money is coming from is being depleted. The commission plans to talk about the problem at its Nov. 13 meeting. right-of-wa- y ' 6:30-Sho- ws this page. on shot on June 9. state-appoint- will, bring together ministers, laymen and laywomen from WashThe ington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana SALT . n Greek-Albania- n rent y . Thailand Visitor Robbed In S. L ' MacArthur Thinks So Was Wainwright 'Temporarily Uribaaced, At Corregidor? NEW YORK (UPI) Gen. Douglas MacArthur believed Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright must have been "temporarily unbalanced" when he ordered the surrender of his troops on Corregidor May 6, 1942, according to a magazine article. " John Toland, writing in the current issue of Look magazine, said that MacArthur charged Wainwright" with mental incompetence after the late Corregidor hero acted against cabled orders forbidding surrender of the Philippine command "under, any circumstances and conditions." MacArthur issued his order from Australia where he arrived late in March, 1942, after his escape from the Philippines. The orders told Wainwright to "prepare and execute an attack upon the enemy." The Corregidor garrison was starving exhausted and disease-ridde- n at the time," Toland said, and MacArthur' s orders could not be carried out. A spokesman for MacArthur said the general had not seen the , An SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) airman from Thailand probably article.. 'And I frankly doubt that he won't recommend Salt- - Lake City will want to make any comment as a tourist spot. Sgt. Dhanaz Sommnuk reported on it when he has read it," he to police Monday somebody stole said. Toland's article is based on his his camera at a bus depot. forthcoming book. He said that when MacArthur HEARINGS SLATED read a summary of Wainwright' s broadcast the general ' WASHINGTON The surrender (UPI) "1 believe said, Wainwright has House Committee on UnAmerican become temporarily unbalanced Activities has scheduled public and condition renders him his hearings Thursday hd Friday, on a bill to bar licensing of radio LI operators who decline to say STARTS TOMORROW whether they have been Commu- nists. ? , . ; BEFORE OPENING I See the detailed-result- view in the theatre lobby! FILM-MAKE- AND CARD SURVEY SPECIAL AT BQX-CFFIC- ! TOLUMBIA PICTUHES ' t if mm i If! I davd - Featuring the voice of as TOSCA. " 1 y- OCT. ; ADULTS, 1.23 - NO CHILDREN, RESERVED .v;-.- I t Venice Bowl Love in a. Goldfish PLEASANT GROVE Grove The, Young Doctors J with Fredrich March AMERICAN FORK The Last Time I Saw Coral Archie LIMITED ENGAGEMENT ' V i- - NATALIE WOOD AND 1 INTRODUCING l', ' r- - ' eMMaeaniMc set? Ail. BEAUTIFUL NEW I iff'- - TTiTnirrtffr - r l.ifTr;:JCgm r .fnr.yr. in 111 iir OPEN 6:15 P.M. 7 p.m. start " M "" r 'T'T Two Color Hits On One Giant Family Program! 1SSOW! PAT IIINGLE WARREN BEATTY" J No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult f Dmrfjcfinn' "THE HUSTLER" lr Starring v A w WILLIAM INGE J5t. STRICTlY A Laugh affair! IOMO FOODProduction JrJi... . mil . ENDS WED. lDAAsYV- -. St . I . tamnnMMiitit twiimum, WINNER OF;4 ACADEMY AWARDS! reeHincouwSUPER TECHNiRAMA70 ukses bt IRENE - PAPAS-GI- A COLOR WV'MvtVyiW'' vMwr - Q OUAYLE Y CARL SCALA-JAM- and ES CIHf WASCOPE (0RUAkImL(1 HD1UKS1 DARREN turnm L, liCUJUl j COLOR In exciting Eastman A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE mmi COSTUME Apollo 1:30-4:54-- 8:23 , ADULTS MATS. 1:25 EVE. 1.50 STUDENTS (with discount card) 1.00 CHILDREN AI'L TIMES 50c "1 : ANNUAL HALLOWE'EN BAKER-ANTHON- ; I V 25 7 Homicidal with Glenn mm 5- r -' luf-taA- - - SEATS Arch Gorbett NEPHI Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason 3 SHOWINGS DAILY! 8:00 P. M. 50c undr 12 Secret Partner and ENDS TONIGHT : K ri presents vA ONE NIGHT ONtY ONE PERFORMANCE Huish The Green Helmet SPANISH FORK -9:10 - . ;.- 1. tlQ 0 GLhr'T WEDNESDAY, PAYSON ill .JM FSFD K3HLMAR 1:10-3:40-6:30- : r ' with Gregory Peck p FRANCO COREUI AFRO POL! MARIA CAN I G LI A til The Parent Trap plus Two Rode Together ' Scera The Guns of Navarone v mm pegi Gala Special Engagement Closed' tm 11 GIVEN I S with Spartacus mm iiiiio wmm COIUUBIA PICTURES FRANCA DUVAl- VITO DE TARANTO Pioneer OREM Geneva The Hustlers with presents SEE, IT AT: Jt Academy Paul Newman Paramount Kirk Douglas I. 1 J PROVO ! WANT A SURVEY FROVT AREA! SURROUNDING VOICE YOUR OPINION ON the Movies Af i RS PROVO Whafs Playing on s AND NOW THE susceptible to enemy use," Toland said MacArthur claimed that his orders to Wainwright to hold Corregidor and prepare a counterattack were based on orders from President Roosevelt forbidding surrender "as long as there remains any possibility of resistance." it PUCCINI'S ' 4 THE EXCITING, CONTROVERSIAL MEYf PICTURE THAT HAD AN UNPRECEDENTED AUDIENCE TEST IN EIGHTEEN CITIES THE FIRST. COMPLETE OPERA EVER FILMED IN CINEMASCOPE and COLOR 9Sdm R E S Two 'UPD Army deserters, who have admitted killing seven per- company'. "Why blame us?" protested the company in a court sons in a spree of terror, make another attempt today to hearing. . "Ernie was simply standing too close to the gain a postponement in their mur- door. Since he'd used that same par for years, he should have had better sense." der, trial. -- AC P RUSSELL, Kan. teen-ag- e le ( By WILL BERNARD Ernie, waiting to climb onto a trolley, stood very close to the door. As it swung open, it struck him in the. hand painfully injuring two fingers. The result was that Ernie launched a tiamage claim against thef trolley Postponement d 10,600-square-mi- ieader s Court ! $ 1.75 $10.60 $21.00 C By United Press International whose Communist Albania, leadership is on Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's blacklist, is a peanut-shapeland of snowy Balkan peaks, political purges and baggy-pant- s peasants. More Oriental than European, Albania's estimated 1,625,000 people are mostly Moslem, although there is po official state religion. Bounded b'y Yugoslavia to the north and Greece to the east and state south, the two former came into being from Turkish provinces after World War I, but it did not have national boundaries until 1925. The tiny country is' ruled with an iron fist by Communist boss Enver Hoxha, who once was an obscure teacher of French in a grammar school on the border. Zog Flees Country Its former ruler, President Ahmed Zog, fled in 1939 when Mussolini's - legions leaped across the Adriatic to invade Albania. He never returned to Albania. Zog died last summer in France. Hoxha, the leader of fierce partisan resistance against the Axis, took over when Zog fled the country. A British officer who parachuted into Albania to join Hox-ha'- s forces in 1943 described him as a man with "ambition, ability to lead, cunning and insincere when needed, and with bo mercy for political rivals." Some postwar statistics underscore this analysis of Hoxha. Of Albania's 14 leaders during World War II, only Hoxha survives. He has run the state for 20 of his 53 years. Of 31 members of the Albanian Workers Party Central Committee the Communist party 14 have been killed and only nine have remained since the end of the war. 0 The party itself has about same as members, about the the population of the landlocked capital, Tirana. Sides With Peiping Hoxha, who idolized Stalin and the Soviet leader's methods, fell afoul of Moscow when he sided with Peiping in the great ideological debate that broke into the open last year. He supported Communist China in the attacks on Khrushchev's "peaceful coa demanded line, existence,' more militant policy towards the West, and hung portraits of himself and Stalin throughout his craggy land. He also, jailed 30,000 political prisoners in 14 concentration camps. Now, observers say, Hoxha's back is to the wall. By counterKhrushchev against attacking over Radio Tirana, he has made rapprochement with Moscow impossible. Some experts, say that since Hoxha was defended by Red at the curChina's Chou .En-la- i Two Killers Asking For 53,-00- By United Press International termed the Monday Bennett 'golden circle" concept of parks discussed by Interior Secy. Stewart Udall "a string of pearls." He alleged Udall forgot to provide for roads In his park plans. r Albania More Oriental Than European utah County utah AMERICAN DANCE Hall ' FORK Thursday Night, Oct. 26 . Prizes for Best and Funniest CARTER'S ORCHESTRA DANCING EVERY THURSDAY J 'I Costumes NIGHT |