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Show I Cloudy today vith Thursday tonight scattered Lows in 30s. weather map on Page showers. and rain Details, B-1- 2. News Tips Home Delivery 76 PAGES 10c THE MOUNTAIN Knew Ex-Uta- hn 524-440- 0 524-284- 0 Information 24-4445 8 Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 524-444- 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 374, NO. 110 VOL. Our Phone Numbers EBET Showers WEST'S FIRST NEWSPAPER OCTOBER WEDNESDAY, 21, 1970 Canada Hopes For Hostage ' Tragedy's Sting r ( SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -Mrs. Dorothy Cadwallader, sec38, the eye surgeons retary who met death with the doctor, his wife and two sons murin an execution-styl- e der, led a life that was not without tragedy. ii Her husband, Jack, partner In a broom manufacturing company, recalled their sorrow eight years ago when their son, Wayne, was killed by a mail truck ir front of their home. The boy was 8 years old. The Cadwalladers had an other child, Melinda, 11, and only a short time ago adopted a boy, Darcy, eight months - PoMONTREAL (UPI) lice today attempted to trace a telephone call that kidnapers may be willing to negotiate uhe freedom of a British diplomat. At the same time an autopsy report revealed that the second political hostage, Cabinet Minister Pierre Laporte had been garrotted with a chain. The autopsy report, by two oid. Mrs. Cadwallader was bom in Salt Lake City, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Lester B. Salt Kinney. She .attended Lake elementary schools and at the age of 15 moved to Santa Cruz. She attended high school in Santa Cruz and mar- ried Cadwallader ago. 19 years Dorothy Cadwallader victim' of slaying leading pathologists, said Qe-be- c Labor Minister Laporte was slain Saturday sometime between noon and 11 p.m. The report, released by Quebec Justice Minister Jerome Choquette, said Leportes body had three wounds which were rather superficial. One was on the chest, one on the left wrist, and one on W o Q a O i 0 5 t' I fcii 1' , the right hand near the thumb. There were no other signs of violence whether interna! or external, the report said. The autopsy was performed by two doctors, Dr. Jean Paul Valcour and Dr. Jean Houle, and the statement was signed by Laurin Lapointe, Montreal District Coroner. The cause of death was asphyxiation by strangulation which apparently was by means of a small chain around Mr. Laporte's neck, which was still in place as the autopsy was peuormed. The mark left by the chain went all around the neck except at the back where it appeared ti have been twisted, the report said. Earlier today the Quebec Provincial Police received word from an anonymous caller that the FLQ may be willing to accept a government offer for safe passage to Cuba in exchange for the release of British Trade Commissioner James R. Cross. citizens V p'"- - s states r UPI -- 3lephoto Officers hook up tew fruek to car used in getaway from grisly family "execution" in Santa Cruz, Calif. ment conditions that they bring Cross to Concordia Bridge Piking Montreal and the Expo 67 Worlds Fair site. Cross is to be left theie in the custody of the Cuban consul and released when the kidnapers reach Cuba. QPP spokesman Constable Claude Talbot said the police had received a call from someone who claimed to speak for the kidnapers of Cross just hours after Quebec Cabinet Minister Pierre Laporte w ns buried in a cemetery on the slope of Mount Royal. Talbot from the midnight said the terested offer. The QPP broadcast a mesthe Montreal sage over Dragnet Hunts Clues In Grisly Slaying Of California Family i & SOQUEL, CALIF., (UPI) -- dragnet hunted through rugged country south of San Francisco today for the killers of five persons in a and possihilltop mansion bly a gasoline station attendant some 25 miles away. . station A are killers which in the wagon believed to have fled the blazing mansion Monday was parked and abandoned in a railroad tunnel and then struck by a locomotive Tuesday 15 miles west of the mass murder site. Some 18 miles northward A huge police from the tunnel, the shot and trussed body of attendant Thomas Dececco, 19, was found at Saratoga. Sheriffs deputies in both Santa Cruz County, where five bodies . were found in the mansions swimming pool, and Santa Clara County, where the attendant was slain, pondered whether the shootings were connected. Victims at the mansion on near Rodeo Gulch road Soquel were Dr. Victor M. Ohta, 47, a wealthy Japanese-America- n eye doctor; his wife, Virginia, 41; their sons, Derrick, 12 and Taggart, 11; and the sicians secretary, phy- Mrs. Dor- othy Cadwallader, 38. All had been bound, blindfolded with silk handkerchiefs and shot in the back before being dumped into the swimming pool. The green and brown station wagon, owned by Mrs. Ohta, was reportedly seen with an orange knapsack in the rear by a person deputies would not identify. There was no sack in it when the train struck it. Deputies said Dececco had been killed four hours after Rising Living Costs Quicken WASHINGTON (AP) pace of rising living - The costs quickened again in four-tent- September, going up of one per cent because of higher prices for clothing, housing and consumer services, the government reported today. . The Bureau of Labor Statistics said last months rise was even higher on a seasonally adjusted basis --of one per cent. five-tent- The September rise- somewhat uampened Nixon Administration hopes for its anti- the bureau noted there still was an easing of the nations worst inflation in 20 years. It said the seasonally - adjusted annual rate of increase had declined to 4.2 per cent in the third quarter of 1970 from 5.8 per cent in the second quarter and 6.3 per cent in the first quarter of the year. However, - inflation campaign that had been raised in August by one of the smallest monthly hikes s in several years of of one per cent. The September rise pushed the consumer price index to 136.6, meaning it cost $13.66 last month for every $10 worth ,of typical family purchases in the 1957-5period on which the index is based. two-tenth- 9 The September report said grocery declined three-tenth- s of one per cent, but because they usually drop more in that month it was figs ured as a rise of on a seasonal basis. prices four-tenth- Inside The News , SECTION A 18, National, Foreign Man City, Regional SECTION Political Pot Financial Obituaries Weather Map 12-1- 4 C 10, 11 t City, Regional Our Man 'Jones 12-1- 9 SECTION 'World Of Women 1 U City, Regional 16, 17, 20 Editorial Pages Do-I- Action Ads 11, 20 1 ....1-4,8-1- 0 four-tenth- 11, 17, 18 12 SECTION D 1, 2. 4, 5, 8, 9 Sports SECTION 5 8, 9 11, 12 12 five-tenth- s, three-tenth- Theater E In other major categories, prices rose 1.6 per cent for the month, housing medical care s transportation, s. and recreation clothing Penneys P 1-- 8 Comics TV Highlights 2 7 J , The report said prices of eggs, lettuce and celery rose in contrast to usual declines in September. But beef, poik and poultry prices dropped instead oi showing their usual small September increase, the Ohta estate shootings. They declared they would rather not comment when asked if there was any witness to his killing. Lou Keller, sheriffs admin--istrati- assistant ir. Santa Cruz County, said:. We are using every method available in the search. Officers are identifying all personnel on foot in the area, he added after the station wagon was struck north of the University of California at Santa Cruz and south of Henry Cowell State Park. The killers, who set Dr. Ohtas mansion on fire, blocked its entrance with stalled cars and fled in Mrs. Ohtas Ohta, Oldsmobile. 47, a wealthy Japanese-- eye doctor; his American wife, their sons Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11; and Ohtas secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38, were bound and blindfolded with silk scarves And shot in the back. The killers then apparently set the sprawling house on fire, blocked its entrance driveways, and fled in the green Oldsmobile. Ohtas two daughters were away at school. Taura, 18, was at a college in New York and Lark Elizabeth, 15, was in a California boarding school. Firemen who finally got to the blazing Ohta home found the bodies when they went to the pool to pump water tor their hoses. There were four bodies on the bottom and one was floating on top, said Fire Chief Ted Pound. thought they were mannequins when I saw the first boy. When I saw the others, I knew they were people. Santa Cruz County Sheriff Douglas James said the victims hands were bound in front of them. They had been See CLUES on Page tI A-1- 2 BACK -WASHINGTON (AP) Most Americans will move their clocks back one hour Sunday and swing to standard time for another six months. The official hour for converting from daylight savings to standard time is 2 a.m. Sunday. Federal officials say one way to beat confusion in the changeover is to turn back the clock at bedtime Saturday night. The change wont affect residents of Michigan, Arizona and Hawaii, states which stay on standard time throughout the year. They exempted themselves by state ' law from the uniform daylight saving time statute. Clocks will remain on standard time until the last Sunday of next April, when daylight saving time arrives again. radio station French-languag-e per cent of, Utahs believe that the liquor laws are too a survey indicated strict, today. The remainder feel either that the laws are not strict enough (31.9 per cent) or that they are about right (23.9 per cent). The survey, by Wasatch Opinion Research Corp., covered a broad spectrum of the states citizenry. It was done for the Deseret News and KSL, which will broadcast the findings. Deseret News Opinion Pol! restaurant owners should be allowed to profit from liquor and 4.8 per cent said they were undecided. The survey, which covered three questions on liquor control and sale, encountered a wide variety of opinions religions, among political and age groups parties, occupations. . s of But well over those polled felt that present laws are either not strict enough or are about right. A two-third- (See complete table of poll results on Page A-4-.) heavy majority also said they preferred the present system under which the state reaps all the profits from sale of liquor. On this issue, those polled were asked which of two alternates they prefer: Give the profits to the restaurant and club owners, which some say will attract new business to the state, or KEEP PROFITS Keep the profits with the State of Utah which some say will discourage an increase in liquor sales. On this basis, 65.2 per cent said they favored the present the whereby arrangement state keeps the profit. Thirty per cent felt club and The third question with the issue which is most likely to occupy the legislators at the next session. lt This is the proposal that waitresses be allowed to serve minibottles of liquor directly at restaurant tables. At present, patrons must go to a sep-Se-e LIQUOR on Fage A-- 4 CHALLENGES ARABS Golda Seeks Peace S QUESTIONS Time Switch Due Sunday-Tu- rn said the first call FLQ came at around (EDT). The caller kidnapers were "inin the governments CKLM, asking ,'he caller to call the police again to verify the first message. The caller did, and then the police gave the caller a question to rsk Cress, presumably to indicate if he is rwe. A third call was received from the caller around 2:30 a.m. (El)T). The caller said the FLQ would get in touch with the police at 6 p.m. today, but gave no reply from Cross on the question police wanted him to answer. Talbot said the police were not entirely sure the call? were bonafide, Your guess is as good as mine. Well just have to see, he said. New hope for the release of Cross the British trade . minister abducted Oct. 5 came about six hours after the body of Pierre Laporte had been consigned to freer crowned Mount Royal. Police continued the most intensive manhunt in the nation's history for ius assas- -' ; sins. Majority Thinks Utah Drink Law Too Lenient ..Only 22.7 1 The caller said the FLQ would communicate with police again at 6 p.m. (EDT) today, presumably to indicate if they will accept govern- Minus Outside Aid UNITED NATIONS (UPI) Israeli Premier Golda Meir today challenged the Arabs and specially the Egyptian of President government to negotiate a Anwar Sadat in the peace settlement Middle East without hin- drance or intervention of any outside power. In a speech to the 25th commemorative session of the U.N. General Assembly she restated the Israeli position that it would like an unlimited cease-fir- e and that there can be no peace talks until Egypt pulls its missiles back from standstill zone. the cease-fir- e Mrs. Meir, wearing a plain black suit ar.d pearls, spoke to one of the largest gatherings of this session, mostly members of the U.N. secretariat since the general public is banned for security reasons. the massive Soviet aid given to Egypt but her deep voice was stern as she said: The question we all face is Israelis and Arabs alike whether we forfeit our right to decide our own destiny. That question will only be resolved in the measure that the people of the Middle East succeed or fail in making peace among themselves and by themselves without hindrance or intervention of any outside power. Recent events in the Middle East have proven yet again that resort to substitutes and alternatives for direct peaceful solution of the conflict creates fertile ground for breaches of promise and mutual suspicion. She said Israel wanted to resume negotiations for peace under the auspices of Gunnar V. Jarring, special U.N. peace mediator, but would not do so until it is demonstrated that agreements that have been The Soviet Union sent only two aides but the Arab nations were present with the exception of Kuwait. She did not refer directly to observed. concluded are faithfully Nobel Prize For Groin Expert - OSLO (UPI) Dr. Norman Ernest Borlaug, an Iowa-bor- n farmer-scientiwho likes to his hands get dirty working in the fields, was awarded the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize today for developing new types of wheat that could help end the worlds food crisis. st The $108,348 prize was awarded to Borlaug, 28, specifically for his work in develstrains oping new wheat which gave bigger yields than older types. The success of his work also contributed indirectly to development of new miracle rice in the Orient. Borlaug did much of his research under the auspices of the Rockefeller Foundation ar.d now pleads the Inter national Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Mexico City, where he lives with his wife and two childr en. The Norwegian Nobel committee said his work has resulted in larger harvests in a number of developing nations, including Mexico, Pakistan and India. Officials of the Rockefeller Foundation said Borlaug's success in improving wheat strains had led the foundation to set up the International Rice Research Institute in Manila where Robert Chandler has been credited with developing rice that produces far more abundant harvests that could ease the critical food shortage in Asia. Friends called Eoriaug a very regular guy who likes to work in the fields with his hands. He was bom in Cresco, Iowa, of Norwegian parents and was educated at the University of Minnesota where he took his doctors degree in plant pathology. He is a friendly, modest man, a spokesman said at the Rockefeller Foundation in New York. He has a contaenthusiasm for his gious work, he is an extremely hard worker and he is dedicated to actualiy working in the fields. The officers of the foundation are delighted and very glad to hear the news. foundation spokesman said the Mexico City ImproveA ment Center, abbreviated as CYMMT in Mexico, is ported by toe Mexican " r w supgov- - emment and an association of organizations in the United States such as the Agency for International Development, the Ford and Rockefeller foundations, the United Nations Development Program Deand the velopment Bank. His work has resulted in new types of wheat which yield several times larger harvest than older types normally planted in Mexico and other agricultural countries, the Nobel committee said. n Todays Thought A man of courage is also full of faith. MarcusJtdlius Cicero |