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Show r -- - -- 7 I moo: means Bountiful voters will be fruitless and a exercising costly popularity head count in the primary voting. Judging from the size of the ballot they will face, and because they have the only may- oralty race in the primary, Salt Lake City voters ' have the biggest tfcsk on election night.- By M. DeMAR TEUSCHER Deseret News Political Editor Seven Utah communities one a reluctant participant will hold primary elections of them Here 'N' There One of those nice people from the British Isles, from Manchester to our wonderwho made ful city of salt for the October LDS Conference, was ' real pleased. Erian Ashworth is an executive of a large Brit-- . ish trucking firm. He s&id until now, he had always considered a conference as an organized way of postponing a Oct. 24. Salt Lake City, Ogden, Provo, Logan, Murray and Midvale need a primary to trim their candi-date lists down to size for the Nov.. 7 municipal final. But Bountiful neither wants nor needs a. primary runoff. However, vstate law appears to require one. None of the six candidates seeking office will be elmmated on Oct. 24. All will appear on which.. the Nov. 7 ballot.-All-of "' the-flig- . A Helping Hand Ive got to help some poor devil out of a sticky situation. Mrs. Hans (Rosa) Christensen is to be honored at an open house on her 80th birthday anniversary Sunday, at. 397 W. 4125 North, Pleasant View, starting at 4 p.m. Her daughter gave her husband some letters to mail out to the folks up in the Bear River area last week telling about the event. And, I just now found them still in my pocket! Copper Talks again at the health store is off Nothing In The Pot Well, the World Series is over and everyone has to short lunch hours again. back gone But, before closing the baseball book for the season, let me tell you about the charming Mrs. J. Bracken Lee. She picked the exact "score of five of the seven games, and predicted St. Louis in seven games. But, when Mayor Lee was discussing his wifes predictions and clairvoyant powers, he admitted he did not follow her advice. And thats the truth. He didnt get into any baseball pots political pots are enough, he said. And thats the truth I find that hard to be You can buy your worst enemy a Christmas gift this year. Stores have puzzles. The box has a of a But, the pieces in the girl. pretty very picture box are not the same picture. In fact, they dont even fit together. w Sob Story You can check this at the local library. One bf .our beautiful city of salt's finer literary clubs met Friday. One of the members was reviewing a real sad new book i a real tear jerker. In fact, the happiest chapter is where the hero gets killed. .. ..And, by the time the reviewer was through, there was only one pair of dry eyes in the auditorium. This unerying gal explained that she wasnt a member of the club and didnt just a guest knowhat the rules were. ... But the big chore will be to select four city commission finalists from the crowded field nine-ma- n Provo, 10 persons are seek--in- g the city commission vacart-- . cy to be filled this fall. Eight of jthe ten will be eliminated in the primary. On the Nov. 7 ballot there will be a contest for city auditor, but there is no primary runoff for this office. Struggle Bountiful taxpayers will pay an estimated $1,200 to $2,000 for the privilege of conducting a which contest p o p ularity will settle nothing on the night of the primary. This, is because the state, jaw reads that candidates to be voted on at all municipal tions In cities of the first and See ELECTIONS, Page B--4 Level, USU Leader Urges LOG AN Utah State University must keep faith with its students and not raise tuitions, Dr. Daryl Chase, USU president, told his board of trustees f Friday. , His statement followed on the heels of a plea by Dr. James C. Fletcher, Univer- sity of Utah president, who . GOP Club Hears asked his Board of Regents for boost to put higher education on a sound footing. a. tuition Dr. Chase noted that resident tuition registration fees for USU students are now 345 per cent of Key Issues what they were when he became president in 1954-5and nonresident fees are 413 per 5 cent of the 1954-5- 5 period. Two key campaign Issues I understand the financial which will help Republicans to pressure that the state faces, win the next election are the he said, "but we must also rec- - breakdown of law and order and ognize that we have placed stu- the handout philosophy of the dents under greater financial admin istration, Republican pressure, too. At Utah State, women were told Saturday. where some 75 per cent of all Richard P. Winder, Salt Lake students live away from home insurance executive, said the to attend school, living expenses U.S. must return to a basis of impose' an additional burden on personal responsibility in both our students, he asserted. .obedience to the law and hi pro- or themselves. He spoke at the conference of the Utah Federa-hightin f Republican Women t the University Club. The women also heard Tess Anderson, field representative for Rep. Laurence L. Burton, Her subject waa Make Room for Me. OBEY LAWS n Dr. Chase referred to a posaJ his board studied Friday under which some institutions of education may raise fees for the winter and spring quar- ters to make up the loss brought about by the four per cent reduction in state funds imposed by the state on all agencies during the current fiscal pro-,vd- One match a day kept cold away for Ira and Ida week provides a package settlement of some 75 cents an hour spread over three years. OBSTACLES REMAIN A Kennecott official said the continuing obstacles to a setof total cost and tlement bargaining still company-wid- e the executives of the firm which places mary. Midvale has seven persons on the city council candidate lists and qiiy six will quality for the Nov. 7 election. Five candidates are seeking the city commission post in Murray, which means voters must drop three persons from A y . One of Lee, in office, of throe four maybe Ogden voters will have three to make. They must eliminate three hopefuls of a field of five seeking the First Municipal Ward seat on, the field council, pare the post to six seeking. the finalists and drop one contestrace in ant from the three-mathe Third Municipal Ward. Ogden will elect all seven members of its city council on primary choices ' bal- loting. There are only six persons on the ballot for the three city council positions in Bountiful. All .six' will be listed on the Nov. 7 ballot regardless of the outcome of. balloting in the pri- Hold Tuition of W. J. Madill, the union joint bargaining committee, accused Kennecott of origirefusing to budge from-it- s nal offer made June 7. Meanwhile, the first break in the nationwide copper walkout was reported in Arizona, but it involved a small company and not one of the Big Four producers, Pima Mining Co. and five unions agreed on a new three-yea- r contract covering 650 workers at the companys mine south of Tucson, They had been working on a basis without a contract since Aug. 31. The agreement expected to be ratified by workers next lieve. A . bid- i 'the running in the primary In-- The phrase, no progress, was again heard Saturday as the 'Kennecott strike ended its third month and negotiations recessed for another weekend. The company and its unions met in two sessions Friday in the offices of the U.S. Mediation and Conciliation Service in the Salt Lake Federal Building. They agreed to meet again Tuesday at 10 a.m. a After Fridays sessions spokesman . for the company charged that the demands of the United Steelworkers of America and other unions affiliated in the bargaining remain unrealistic. WONT BUDGE sick. jig-sa- Mayor J. Bracken ding for a third term faces the challenge opponents. Two of the oralty candidates will - Nov. 7 but there will be no primary in the Second and Fourth Municipal Wards. In Recess Wrong Occupation ? My favorite clerk down 19 applicants. Voters will eliminate 15 aspirants on elec. tion night. Both incumbent --.commissioners George B. Catmull and Louis E. Holley are seeking of r during ordeal. Survive Me cm, Lloyd Desert Hike 7-D- ay semi-annu- er year. It iSv absolutely essential, Utah state should continue to make the most efficient and Mr. Winder told the Federation, economical use possible of funds for the nation to maintain a of liberty under law He had fired at a bobcat near Shouting continuously, the two:a v a i 1 a b 1 e and PAUL SWENSON By rewould carefully philosophy no Kennecott employe in vocal contact that the road. everyone obeys all the kept couples ajj ot,er goUrces 0f jn Deseret News Staff Writer turn to work anywhere until About a mile away the Lloyds until they located each other Lome before im ,ng addition.' laws all the time. reached been has agreement Kimballs used their Fish , God provided the firewood, heard the He said recent riots and civil Help. helD. the with Kennecott operations ev kd taktaicT stalk' m four Mr. wife the "ild' disobedience were traceable to hi, Lloyd malches, Lloyd Or-Cs,uenlvwh. See COLTLE on Page 1M constant preaching by certain He contended, we have of- Creek Last Chance that individuals need crackers, Mexico to Baltimore) lished a fee schedule for the fered an occasional drink of those laws with which obey only nions Mr. Madill said the school year and we have al- - they water agree had kept their commitment to' ready made a number of budget, n en0Be m the governor to submit detailed! And somehow, a Salt Lake so as no to have adjustments 70s in result would utter cha walked their for cost figures on pension propos-- , couple to raise these fees further. 40 miles he and seven gaid. anarchy(.. union through days reduce to als and He pointed out that the board, WAR ON LAZY demands to less than a dollar southeastern Utahs desert-w- ith at its September meeting, re- - Similarly, he said, adminis-duce-d nothing to eat after the first an hour over three years. library acquisitions and tration policies have tended to the continuing day and survived, Concerning Gov. Calvin L. Rampton will be at sea when the primade cuts in capital and current encourage people to abdicate DESCRIBES HOW argument over the pricing ofmary election is held Tuesday, Oct. 24, but his vote will expense items in various divi- - gome of their freedoms In order pension demands, he said the! Ira B. Lloyd, 75, and his wife be in the ballot box nonetheless. 2G54 Hartford St. (1610 sions, "even though the budget to be guaratneed total security, had and 73, the union Ida, governor Is the threatened cutback in should not be made. It also The governor made sure of this when he cast an s was already tight, because the from "We feel that it is best to help that the recovering East), conflicting! suggested would slow down the interstate federal highway funds a absentee ballot Friday in the Salt Lake City commissionbe submitted to anjtion in their Salt Lake home original legislative appropria- - people to help themselves rath-tio- n on cal bluff? Taxes highway ers and mayor race. program. did not meet our needs. er than to live their lives for firm to Saturday, talked about how they E. M. Johnson, president of users should continue to be used independent actuarial He was the sixth person to personally drop his absendid it. which are correct, determine hp stated, He asserted that land grant J1?"1the American Association of for highway building, he added. tee ballot into the box in the city recorders office. Also, of a war "Instad We knew that if God wanted "Kennecott consistently refus- intended on,.pov.OT to are State Highway Officers and L. K. Bridwell, federal highcolleges provide 28 absentee ballots were mailed out to on aPatlY ndlf: war need according would to us come Friday, he out, to es the entertain idea, pro the, a, education to as many as chief highway engineer of Mis- way administrator, Washington, quality of City Recorder Herman J. Hogensen. vide a way, Mr. Lloyd said. ference, laziness sissippi, declined to commit D.C., also parried the question union leader said. P The governor will leave Utah Sunday to attend the con- he to if it time were , Mans-our "And Mike responsibility, personal Sen. go Meanwhile, of himself on that question at a politics. He said he is in Salt nine-daNational Governors Conference aboard 8 ship How can we remain consist- - tinued, Senate majority, that everything would be taken Friday afternoon press confer-- j Lake City to meet with highway field, the between Islands. Coast the East and with that philosophy if we ent Mr. Winder said a person Virgin traveling nce. administration people and to leader, reported the administra- - care of. Absentee balloting is permitted for persons who will Kim-th- e so tuitions that should have an opportunity to Donna raise John and "When high many invoke to not still does He did say such a cutback participate in the AASHO con tion plan be at least 20 miles away from their precinct on election students find it impossible to create his own security through Act to end the hall came down that hiU to get would have a serious effect on vention now under way at Hotel day or who are physically handicapped or confined. his own efforts. attend? he asked. . us, it was like meeting two strike. the stale highway programs and Utah. We Heaven. from had angels been among the dead and now we were resurrected. FIND LLOYDS SUCCESSFUL SEARCH It was Mr. and Mrs. Kimball, employes of the Utah Fish and Game Department, who found the Lloyds Friday about 4 p.m. in Last Chance Canyon while driving southeast from' Tropic, Garfield County, and Grosvenor executives in top positions is named Struggles Heidrick and Struggles, Inc. They are the people who discovered that Utah produces more top executives than any other state per population. But the word down on Wall Street is that a person striving to become a top dog in any organization cant make it without Struggles. Sorry about that. remain." He said the unions insist that I. E ' pub-jeade- RAMPTON CASTS VOTE, Cutback Only A Bluff? Aides Parry Question BY ABSENTEE BALLOT exhaus-evaluation- ; - y ' Taft-Hartle- y Supreme Court Refuses To Restrain S.L. Club Law Lost Nevada oy Spotted From Plane A : CEDAR CITY Las Vegas boy, missing since Friday afternoon in rugged a country near the Jsorder west of here, was found alive and well Saturday mom-- walkie-talki- e radios near the familys deer hunting "I last saw him camp. when he stepped around a juniper tree about 30 feet away, the plder Barrett said. "A few minutes later I heard him Shout Grand 'JS. radio. Daniel Barrett, 7, son of father and grandfather walk-; was Las 'Barrett, Vegas, and about 30 other hunters in ;ing up a ravine three miles west the area searched extensively Cof the border when he was spot-- ' Iron ted from a Utah State Fish and for the boy before the sheriff was contacted. County Game Department plane. At nightfall, the search was Searchers on horseback were halted, and. hunters stationed contacted and reached the boy a themselves at various points to short time later. listen for th6 childs calls. - The .boy-becaseparated - They also made a continuous from k his . grandfather, Victor effort through the night to con Barrett of Mesquite; Nev:, tact him on the portable he was i shortly after noon as they tested transmitter-receive- r Utah-Nevad- Gene;r me Arch. The Utah Supreme Court re- - reached Sept. 25 by Third Dis- We drove around a bend and fused to issue a restraining trict Judge Aldon J. Anderson, there they were, Mr. Kimball to stop Salt Lake He was asked by Mr. Hansen to Friday said. its liquor rule on the constitutional validi- from City enforcing . carrying when he vanished. The Kimballs were aiftong CIUD ormnance-izenty of the ordinance. His decision The Utah Fish and Game De- hundreds of southern Utah not The took its action court only was that Mr. Hansen is high partment plane which spotted; ant) Salt Lake neighbors of the boy from the air Saturday the Lloyds who had joined a during a conference after hear- - not a proper party to challenge had been brought into the area massive hunt for the couple, re- ing its regular calendar of cases jits validity but that the ordi-wh- o nance is constitutional. to police the Utah side of the line ported missing Monday. Mr, Hansen has filed an on the opening day Saturday of HEAR SHOTS appeal of this decision with the Nevadas deer hunt. The Utah s It was a shot from Mr. Court. His ttle order during the time itjUtah Supreme deer hunt doesnt open until resulted in the would take for his rifle that next Saturday. appeal to the1 request Friday for a restraining fateful meeting with the. Lloyds. court on the of the order was a prelude to this about the Officers ,r - Kim-ball- worrit number of armed hunters in. the area and the possibility the lad might be shot at. . Iron County .sheriffs officers, the Beaver 'County' Jeep Posse and Lincoln County Nev., sheriffs : officers - had - started a sweep .of the area from: both sides of the border when the boy was found Saturday.' . s SECTION City, Regional Comics ' Obltudries Weather Map Action Ads Hansen has 30 days to file his delayed a test of our ordinance brief and Salt Lake City has 20 by proper parties for this days. Without delays the courtmonth period. could docket the case within 90 Mr. Barker said proper days. parties are now testing the or- six-ord- er Salt Lake Public Safety Com- - dinance. missioner James L. Barker Jr.,; In saying this he referred to e fact that seven of Salt sponsored writing and actment of the ordinance by the Lakes 26 clubs have filed a suit City Commission last May, said jin Third District Court chaQeng- the high court's rejection of Mr. ing the ordinance and have se a restraining order until Hansens petition for a restrain-leure- d ing order against it is most Nov. 1 against its enforcement en-th- against them only, pleasing. v ' Some six months ago, he1 Mr; Barker said these seven licensing .ordinance to reach a'appeal. when the attorney clubs, along with 12 other who ; Now that Mr. Hansen has his declared, conclusion. The decision of the court is appeal before the court there is general indicated he was going have secured licenses from the thafMr. Hansen, as the attor-- a period of 40 days during to sue the city he was told we city by paying a $251 fee now r ney general, would not be which the record of the ease,-- in did not believe he was the. prop- operate legally. r affected by the ordi which Sa)t Lake City is aier person to bring an action on The seven clubs are the 4 adversely 2 nance and. thus Is. not a proper friendly" .defendant, must be behalf of the East; Olympic private Pride, Athletic Club,118l-Wilmingto-for" a Restraining sent to . the .court by the "Salt dubs. 4, 5 partyto-as- k His insistante In. Interjecting Ave.; Salt Lake Loan Assod-Se- e Lake county clerk. ' order. RESTRAINING, This is the same conclusion After this period of time Mr. (himself into the matter has j B l..l, 239-5t- h n ..5 .5-1- 5' I PkBL I ef- |