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Show whatiieh rv 30-1- ("til iuira Jf 45 Comics 37 EdnorUl 3t SiK'irt) Sports Sloiis imiajK&,. PROVO-SAL- 14 PROVO, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, ( CTOHER For Nominations 1, 1?5 $3.00 PER MONTH - PRICE Raise 5 a m I A change in election taws has resulted in a change for the date of nonunatmg conventions m Orem for the three city council posit ions up for grabs in theNtv 4 election. The People's Party and the Citizens' Party had originally scheduled their conventions for Wednesday. Oct. 8. but a recent change in election laws places Tuesday, Oct. 7, as the deadline. Switch in Dates John Paulson, chairman of the People's Party, told the Herald his party will meet at Westmore Elementary School on Tuesday at 8 p.m. It was announced the Citizens' Party of under the chairmanship Curtis Ledbetter, will meet the same date and time at Orem High School. Alan Homer, finance director and city recorder for Orem, said he will attend one of the conventions and have a representative at the other to accept the nomination forms of the before expiration deadline Former Law The former law allowed parties tc hold conventions up Facilities For Fair Get Nod By Josephine Zimmerman at the livestock nearby school buildings in Spanish Fork offer enough space for a large Utah County Fair with numerous Facilities and and displays activities, members of the Bicentennial Fair board reported last night at a regular planning meeting. Recently board members toured the site and expressed satisfaction with the facilities which have been offered them by Spanish Fork City and the Nebo School District for Uie fair. Good Response Utah County is reactivalhg its county fair after many years, and Kent Prestwich, fair board chairman, has expressed great satisfaction with the enthusiastic response the fair is receiving from all sources. After touring the- Spanish Fork facilities, fair board members voted to hold the fair there and to plan for permanent facilities in the future. At Tuesday night's meeting the board began the task of allocating the available space for the many activities which are planned. Displays ?nd exhibits will be housed in the old Spanish Fork Junior High school, which the has School Nebo District offered. Space avnlable will - the include band room, home making rooms, shop, cafeteria, gymnasium, stage at gymnasium, and dressing rooms. Othr Space In addition, the fair can occupy spare on the tennis courts, lawn, track: football field, baseball field, a.'id other outdoor areas. Livestock events will ds held at the Utah Junior Livestock yards immediately across the street, as well as in grounds nearby. Some discussion was devoted to a suitable location for th carnival, with Sheriff Mack K Holley recommending that bt placed ii'.vay from the display areas. Spanish Fnrk indicated it could be held o.i the old skating pond north of the livestock grounds, if sumi preparation work was done there. representatives the Mi. ritbtv.ich indtca'-ecarnival companies prefer to bt? located on paved areas or lawns. It was pointed out by several representatives that liw skm!,. nr.k area had a sur?ae mlvT'nusty. I Set w S Okayed By House within 15 days of the November election. The change, instituted during the last legislative session, Councilmeri LeRoy Walker and Glen Zimmerman, both of the Qtizens' Party, have announced their intention to of seek states, "Certificate nomination of candidates shall Councilman E. Dixon Larson be ftLd with the city recorder of the People's Party has not !dtf than the fourth publicly announced he would Tuesday prior to the November not seek nomination for the seat he is presently holding. rfiujucipci) election. TW C" parliamentary maneuvering after Rep. Heriiert Harris, sought to bring to the floor that would have disapproved Ford's lower pay Public Invited cxt-T.- The Senate on Sept. rejected an identical resolution vote. of disapproval on a Employment Security. The number of unemployed worker! in Utah County dropped from 4',736 in August to 3,560 in September. The report also points out, however, that MacArthur Honored By Hirohr'tc'' Vk WILLIAMSBURG (UPD Emperor Hire lito, pi his first trip fo the United a p rint of States, made honoring the memor of Che American the percent of a., incoming department population and parents and accompaning returning students who have beenentering the labor force. ToureinployTnent increased by 2.976 above August's figure and is up by 1,290 during the last 12 months, the report said. Manufacturing employment at 9,876 was down by 945 workers from the September 3974 figure. following -- time high of 65,ftJ5 an increase of 2,143 above the September, 1974 figure. This represents an increase of 3.4 percent in the work force and is attributed by the Lutile M. Services gener .1 who accepted the surr nder of Japan in 1245 and tf ;n hc(ped rebuild modern Japa i. Agricultural employment, a seasonal trend, unemployed workers dropped normally declines this time of by two full points, it is stiii 1.1 year as harvests subside. The percent above the figure for number of workers in mid .September 1974. September was 62 below But the civilian !ator force in August's figure, but was 804 the courty is reported at an all more than September 1974. ' while employment normally jumps upward each Septerrbr as schools start a new year, and September was no exception as the number (Continued on Page 5) Hie only Japanes monarch ever to make a statf visit t the United States order d a wrath of white mums and red carnations placed n his f vhalf at the MacArthur Memcnal in nearby Norfolk. Japanese offic als sud his decision Tuesda; to ht"ior the late Gen. Dougl; s MacArthur, the command .r of allied occupying fon es kept Hirohito on tr thrtne after Japan's World War was an impr imptu one. Diplomatic so. rces oaid the emperor cou J nt olace the wreath persr tally (because of possible polit tal repercussions at home. eat Glads likely Brigho'm UioCner. Sl'f. worked fit ttWic as a li'jtfi.vr. Uo-ar- y - Throng Notes Anniversary Armed Terronsts Slay 3 Policemen In Madrid MADRID (UPiH- - Bands of .Imid the violent ( terrorists armed with saved-of- f eacion was a oreign plot gainst Spain by i'ree Masons shotguns killed three Madr.'d ,poIi;:emen and i.ridCommunistf,' The almost y multaneous at-- I critically wounded a fourlh on polic men in different w'.ii!c acks emotional an today arts of the c' ,y was the largest crowd of a million perso?is celebrated the 39th j tjorrill.i op ration of a wave of anniversary of Generalissimo jolitica! r'jlence that has hit Francisco Franco's rise to p?in in recent months. It rough! ingry roars from the power. of 500,000 persons ( rowd Plaza de Franco, angered by widej itm d into spread European and world ( her Square who shouted, reaction to Spam's execution of ' n Army to Pover!" and five terrorists Saturday for the ' r'roriststotheWall!" Vith his voice sometimes slaying of other policemen, ; Away From C( ast Ml AM (UPh carrifi - Hurricane potent lour fciiids toward the no thw st todi,;, but forecasters pr .dieted it would veer from Yht U.S. coast Gladys Petersen Speaks aay ihurs Relief Society Growth ay. Noted at Conference then taught second grade in the Judquin elementary School from 1942 to 1948. She spent another year with the public library before accepting a position with BYU library end remained there until 19G7 when she became an assistant, then associate professor in the Graduate School of Library Science. She retired last June. During her timj of ployn.ct she earned a rr ister ra education and a d ctor o' education from BYU a id a liHary science master's Unnp-'sit; ; of Southern er. alifor.ia Mrs. Zhorne. is a member of in bawry teachers society, ftono;aiy library association, BYl' Wnmea and the Alice Louise Club. She is pre'idi'r.t - elect of the Utah Library Association. fine. has been an active LDS memlvr and has encouraged her to pursue their An' B. Smith, general p esiiient of the Roliat SvK.ie.y, epwied that its membership is Twj te;i-:hi- .eadership religious haw .Tved in positions in civic, r ofesnional and, organizations. Through the )R!'l haw 'Jne daughter is teaching r. BYU, two are elementary school in Calior lia Indiana while a fp irth daughter is a proles' onai v.riter and a sen is an jr hiiect ii California. The children the Prove fo inded, among five f 7W Square. He told Acrn that they must church and its put th' teachinrj ahead of worldly philosc liies which have failed U ste .1 the "rapid breakdown of t'.i home and family in i and he 'id doctorates and a thit is v,or; jng toward a doctoral t . iV3 ptysica! hardships in helping femd the church and modern iV irmon women facing "the challenge of keeping free from wjrldly ideologies and of insidious forces that wait on eery h;nd to entrap, to cm.t've tY i S.ALT LAKE CITY (I PI ) Mormon Apostle M rk E. Petersen today ur ,ed the women of the Churc' of Jesus Christ of Latter da Saints to embrace "God's version of liberation." Petersen jdd pcsed 10,000 leaders of the Aelief Society attending thr last general the Mormon conference ' women's au iliary on Temple fdu'-'Etio- religious pursuits. All .children are married and earn-master degrees. Young University. Following praiuation from BYIJ, she taught Engl'.jh. and dramatic arts n (he Juarez Stake Academy in Cilonia Juarez, Chihuahua. Mexico. She married Harold Arthur Thome of Pleasant Grove in 1931 arid became the mother of flvP children. She has 22 &IO,iJi hilUieii auu out great grandchila. Mr. Thome was killed m .1941 and Mrs. Thome returned to work to support her hmiiy and seized the man io' ,erinj outside the hotel, searched him, art whisked him away in a police cai The Incident illustrated the tightened seu- ity protecting Ford. 1 To Veer Orem Names Mother of Year and A MAN IDENTIFIED as ' "om Weber is hustled away from North Shore Hilton where President Ford wa meeting in Chicago with area mayors today. Police 7iome By L YNN TILTON The Orem IJoosters hav selected Dr. Lticile MarKtiani Thome as Orem Mother of the Year for 1975. She succeeds Florence Todd Britsch. Mrs. Thome will be a candidate for Utah Mother of the Year, an honor won by Mrs. Britsch in 1971. A resident of Orem since 1972, Mrs. Thome is a native of Spanish Fork where she was bom to Joseph and Mary L. Markham. She was educated in the Provo City Schools, Rrigham Yning High School, The North Shore Hilton Hotel 111., where Ford spoke was virtually n armed camp following two attempts on his life in California last month. His comments came shortly after heavy security forces around him made a second arrest here within 24 hours on a y Midwestern swing. Officials said neither person was a threat to the President. Ford met with the mayors, mostly from Illinois, along with a few from Michigan and Wisconsin, and urged them to extension push for a five-yeof the program which expires Dec.31.I97G. "We have to be very alert tc ibilit the through delay or substantial change, this legislation might not be extended or may be restricted," he said. "I urge all of you to push for action. Don't be complacent. Get organized, join arm in two-da- 5.4, spouses d in suburban Skokie, The House vote today was ir favor of tabling Harris' propof al to bring the disapprovf resolution to the floor. Tl j effect of the vote is that tJ e civilian and military personr ;1 will get a 5 per cent pay ra e effective today. Utah County's Jobless Rate Dips to Far Below Nation's Average August's 7.4 percent to 5.4 percent in mid - September, which is far below the. national average, according to & report released today by the Provo office of the Department of -- (UPI) "catastrophic" consequences. 53-3- 9 I Unemployment in Utah County dropped sharply from Chicago Mayors Confab CHi'CAGO 18 Perhaps the only opportunity to hear all 13 candidates for Provo City commission and auditor is planned Thursday night when the League of Women Voters hosts the candidates in an information meeting at the Provo Utilities Building, The 7:30 p.m. meeting will include a short statement from each of the candidates and a question and answer session with citizens in attendance. A primary election next Tuesday will eliminate all but two names from the competition for each office. The final election will be Nov. 4. Any Provo resident not properly registered to vote in the primary election may register Saturday in the individual voting districts. A list of registration locations wiii be published in tomorrow's Herald. Commission candidates include Blaine L. Houtz, Dr. Ken Larsen, Robert P. Young, Bert Fisher, M. Wayne Hillier (incumbent), Robert K. (Bob) Allen, William Theron Haws, Richard L. Lord and J. Earl Wignall. Auditor candidates are H. Blaine Hall (incumbent), Anthony R. Fernlund, Wendell V. Miller and Stanley C. DeFriez. 1 MW' Pres dent Ford told 33 mayors of imall midwestern towns tor' ay any failure by Congress tf the gener?! rvenue-'.narin- g program could have raise proposal and ordered tne higher pay into effect. Prove C Sift? Forum Tomorrow fl Sharing I xfensmn WASHINGTON (UPD-T- he House today gave final approval to President Ford's plat to give a 5 per cent pay rai? ; to some 3 million federal employes and military personnel as well as Congress itself. Opponents ot Ford's plan were pushing for an 8 66 per cent pay hike. The 278 to 123 vote came in a resolution rooms, library, B to auditorium, science classrooms, It 11 CENTS 15 G Of yard LAKE-OGDE- Sunny with nild days through Thursday. Highr, near 80, low tonight mid 40s. I'Jah as a vhoIe, sunny and mild days through Thursday. HA til 61 taaan eirs, Mrs. (Continue'! Pa?e5) ,rca." 'arbara " ei slave, and to destroy. In his talk to the first general constision of the three-da- y ference, women's Petersen said the was organization other reasons, (Continued on Page 5 V'ASillNGTON (LTD Mouse intelligence -- The committee, hours of heated voted 10 to 3 to accpt CIA Welnesday dor agents on the 1968 Tet r&nMve in Vietnam under soe'ecy conditions stipulated by aJt!or William E. Colby. Colby bowed to a r two argment, Nsuvoo, III., where 'he Sodoiy was founded during the 1840s. An exact location hasn't beenchoiien. she said. Mrs Smith sid the monument wcjld hnfinr both pioneer M'jrnon wonier vlioov-rcin- e of late citation Tuesday Coigress niglit. and turned the secret docunents over lo committee Cteirmari Otis Pike, delved and witli 50 word y in oft and becoming inaudible, the Franco said the foreign campaign was the result of a g "plot hatched by Masonism in the ruling class (of Western European left-win- countries) and Communist in the subversion terrorist social field." Many Western diplomats earlier boycotted a reception marking the 39th anniversary Franco's proclamation as Spain's Caudillo (leader) during the civil war. At least 15 nations have recalled their ambassadors from Spain in protest against the executions. Their countries had been of Tuesday angrily denounced night by Premier Carlos Aria Navarro for what he called their "boundless hypocrisy." Deaths of the policemen today brought to 22 the number slain by guerrillas this year. More than 30 civilians died in political violence during the same period. Spain pxecuted five terrorists last Saturday for slaying a move Spanish policemen that touched off demonstrations throughout Europe and South America in a wave of continuing resentment against Franco's role in the Spanish Civil War and his authoritarian rule. h Panel Agrees to Secrecy On Vietnam Documents approaching the one million mark, with 915 816 w omen now enrolled. Sne al.-- announced pl?ns for "a monument of heroic proportions that would 'Jlaiid as a as symbol of womanhood conceived from a Latter-daSahit poir.t-o- t view" io be buiit ) trailing aft ! con jressionul subpoena thrm of a contempt ajit'nr care lieno'icod and m making the information public Pike had threatened to carry the matter to the full House and seek a contempt citation unless the administration cooperates with the committee's probe of the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence gathering groups. Pike said Wednesday he thmks d?letion of the 50 words war. jwtifid, after it was explained to him, hit he remf'ias restive about remaining restrictions on publication and continues to question why other requested document arc arm." Ford said more than $20 billion in federal money has been distributed to cities and states since general revenue sharing became law, and the funds went to about 39.000 local governments. But he warned that "there has been some delay, some feeling that the program should be eliminated, and srme who want to modify or hamstring the program." The President entered trie ballroom for his meeting with the mayors with a squad of agents around him. There also were two dxtors and a nurse hovering nearby. Agents and Skokie policemen were checking every visitor into the hotel and the passes of reporters and cameramen were examined with special care. Agriculture Products Prices Rise WASHINGTON i UPI) -- The price of farm products rose an average 3 per cent in the month ending Sept. 15, compared with levels, a new Agriculture Department report says. The department said the September Tuesday increase in pri?es for raw farm products was due mainly to a rise in wheat, milk, beef, hogs and eggs. Corn, soybean and potato prices wen! down BULLETIN Utah County Sheriff's noon today to investigate a call about a man's body found in a camper unit about 10 miles up from Starvarion Canyon Tucker. Sheriff Mack Holley reported the track is registered to a Spanish Fork man, but that the dead man could be a member of his party, believed ic be an elk hunting group. The sheriff added that the call came from Ray Klauck, Springville resider!. Tucker was once a railrosd town in Spduini) F Ciiiyoa where the rest stop is now u Starvation Csaycn is along the dirt road to the left which provides a backwoods rout? to Scoficld Reservoir, |