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Show if fk M m 9 88 V- m&m VOL 383 NO. 236 72 PAGES. . m i 1 a 8k 1 llJ' ssfiassitisii H I SAIT LAKE CITY, UTAH ?5w faS I I tf IJ I m 'm 15 CENTS !a e Hi w tvui && M knoini krdioty the isiufe oj Ueyerei' aa METRO FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1975 - 1650 u hv.i Lduh Founded 0 T -- - AUTHORITIES ARE WATCHING the Canadian border for three persons who may have left Montreal bent on assasinatino President Ford and Japanese Emperor Hirohiro, but there is no evidence the trio has crossed the border so far, officials said today in Albany, N.Y. ANOTHER STRANGE TURN was token today in the James R. Hoffa case, with FBI agents investigating whether Hoffa's body was stuffed in a trash compactor at a Detroit restaurant, then named b'J' u?f. fltvaw -' WASHINGTON The (AP) nation's unemployment rate declined from 8.4 percent to 8.3 percent of the labor force in September, although the jobless rate increased for adult men and heads of households, the government reported today. The September report indicated there was no significant change in the over all employment situation in the country. The Labor Department said the number of unemployed in September totail d nearly 7.8 million, down only a few thousand from the August jobless total. The number of employed persons was slightly more than 5.4 million, also just a few thousand more since August, the department said. The size of the nations labor force also increased only slightly, to just under 93.2 million in September. The rate of unemployment has shown little change during the last three months. The Labor Department said the rate was below the recession jobless peak of 8.9 percent during the second quarter of the year. Economists often pay more attention to what is happening ?i," vi 9toiu,w .aw t (non iu cwi :paf sy . nta related development, the Detroit News said lawmen believe the underworld informant attempting to direct them to Hoffa's alleged grave is Harry Hall, written ott by top Justice Department officials as a liar. to employment in different categories of the population, and the Labor Department gave this September unemployment breakdown for various groups : "- Adult men, 7 percent, up 6.6 percent in August. Adult women, 7 5 percent, down from 7.7 percent in August. -Te- en-agers, 19.3 percent, down from 21.1 percent in from Whites. 7.6 percent, unchanged from August. Black and other races, 14.3 percent, up from 14 percent in August. Married men, 5.3 percent, up from 5 percent in August. Full time workers, 8.2 percent, unchanged from August. Household heads, 5.7 percent. up from 5.5 percent in August. The unemployment figures were released one day after another unfavorable inflation report by the Labor Department that wholesale prices rose of percent in 1 In Elder Bruce R. McConkie - Semi-Annu- WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate approved today and sent to the White House legislation lifting the U S. arms embargo against Turkey and permitting the sale of $185 million worth of American weapons to that country. By a voice vote, the Senate accepted House approval of the sale, it was a victory for President Ford, who bad sought for months to end the embargo. The House gave 237 to 76 approval Thursday night to a bill allowing Turkey to buy the arms. The approval marked the ninth time the House had xoletl on the issue since the embargo was imposed in February. Ford welcomed the final congressional approval, saying it is an essential first step in the process of rebuilding a relationship of trust and friendship with valued friends and allies in the Eastern Mediterranean. In Ankara, Turkeys forei fn minister, Ihsan Sapri Caglayangil, said the vote was the beginning for Turkish-Americaeliminating the shadow which has fallen on relations, but that immediate reactivation of the U.S. bases Turkey has dosed was out of the question. Tiie $185 million in weaponry had been contracted for by the Turkish government before Congress, irate over the use of American arms in Turkey 's invasion of Cyprus, stopped the sale. Speeches on wide-rangin- ad- opening g A-- 3. bership filled the Tabernacle and other nearby buildings for the opening sesconference. sion of the three-da- y Hundreds of others took advantage of the balmy autumn weather as they listened to conference sessions broadcast via loudspeakers outdoors on Temple Square. A-- 3 Appointment of lour new- General Authorities of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, described as part of a new impetus to worldwide missionary activities, was announced Friday by President Spencer W, Kimball. - President Kimball announced that: a vacancy caused by the death June 25, 1975, of Elder Milton R Hunter The First Quorum of Seventy be organized with an eventual membership of 70 men. The First Council of The Seventy presides over the quorum and is included in its 70 1 iiii WASHINGTON (UPD Frank E. Moss, - Sen. said today that freeing natural gas prices from federal controls could strangle our economy and send it back down to again. He said the Senate should approve ti proposal by himself and Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson 111, to lift controls partially on gas and force down prices on uncontrolled oil. That amendment to an emergency natural gas bill before the Senate would allow newly found natural gas to be sold at up to $1.30 per thousand cubic feet, more than twice the current federal ceiling. It would force the price of uncontrolled oil back to $9 a barrel and keep the ceiling on controlled oil, making an average around full-tim- domestic oil prices. Stevenson said $6.75 per barrel for oil and $1.30 per thousand cubic feet for gas are roughly equivalent. Under the both prices could rise over a five-yeperiod. Sonttj refused to kll Thursday an alternative proposal by Sens, James B. Pearand Lloyd M. son, to lift some Beiilsen J r., controlled gas prices now and others later. !... mpansU&H! -v- w, -- The Thursday vote leaves that proposal, as well as the Moss one and the original emergency bill sponsored chiefly by Sen. Ernest F. Hollings. ail pending before the Senate. A vote has nor. been set for any of them and debate could be lengthy. ' v . Elder ZiMWtibJ - MMMSim Gene R. Cook jmm rnmmmsmElder William Bradford R. A grand jury has ANGELES (UPD d down the CaSifomia charges against Ida Heard and her SLA companions to 11 its bearing penalties up to life in prison ;tical victory for prosecutors. FBI sources said Miss r San Francisco, rst. already facing hank robbery charges e, had been positive!? linked to a bank iery ami k'iling in Sacramento that could a death sentence. . Aiks .moir chai'Kf r. !! to- - filed FOLLOWING A FLAMBOYANT full-bloo- l ii. iour new' Gvneral Autliuritics where to be sustained by the conference in the 2 p.m. session Friday. See 4 APPOINTED an 2 A-- lump." wPllls MSiMSSS ggglp NEW YORK (UPI) Hopeful a decline in the money supply might prompt the federal board to ease its monetary policy, investors uus ed prices sharply and broadly higher today in light trading on the New York Stock Exchange. nation's uroi nt ? . VV,::, t It 1 (Complete New York, American lists on .) " lissl - J r; saN WMsgal0' jiSjpSBL ... - qpSSiipM Elder CharUs A. Eher Georqe P. Lee D dser aliliough their cases are still joined. Miss Hearst is undergoing psychiatric examination ordered by a federal court in San Francisco and there has been no determination yet by siule aiid federal prosecutors which trial will be held first. "t of th as Harrises posljnri.cd toduv until Fiiib.y .mi Mrs. h work ,v;ih her ll.irti' .;ii sis r, an . , II Will, ,i 'it.Cii 1, ,i, told Hallman Terence Hmrst attorney nailers us r.lieat was "'under a hK ot - Cor-crete- ti! fuel,... nt by tHjpMMB cr--t fu-C- Sevier Valley, Delta-Ced- - hirh she fto said 2"aiir'! M,c !' unisft tier oil. H ,ould tuite away w iC, in' would 4he las'. ,1 her rr.de TSe grano jury mtiicimei her tg; state charges iiied and 18 ugiiul-- t eacn of tiie iiu t.' l attr-rnc-- Th appearance Field Marshal Idi Amin, Uganda's unpredictable president, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodia's resilient chief of state joined diplomats today at the U.N. Genera) Assembly. Meanwhile, Amin, who was snubbed by American officials, says he still loves President Ford. The news helped maintain the oversold market's rally. Shortly before : 5 p.m. EDT, the Dow Jones louustria! Average was ahead 9.53 points to 804.08. k Index was up 1.11 to Standard & Poor's Slppllf Utah. I w a inevitable 24-ho- 500-Stoc- WiJliniT! Rswsel Bradford of McAJlen. Texas, a Seventy now serving as president of the Chile Santiago Mission. He was horn in Springville, The began to have then e family. ... . The ti.cmn I , . . . tried 1 i. J he guilty, so why not everyone else, complained her mother, Catherine Hearst. in Kedwcmi The government wants to pin every City. thing on fior 15 eruer to act rid f everything m one Happv stomach wound. VIOLENCE SHAKEN Northern Ireland slipped a step nearer possible civil war today with a storm of shootings and bombings which once again pitted Protestants against Roman Catholics. In Limc-rick- , kidnapers seized a leading Dutch businessman and said he will be slain within 48 hours unless three top Irish Republican Army prisoners are freed. S, 93 Troubles mount for Patty, family feels eff ,OS critical" not STOCK MARKET TODAY of Charles Didior, Belgium residing in Frankfurt, Germany. Also a Seventy, he is a Regional Representative of the Twelve and the First Belgian to become a church General Authorit' Dr, George Patrick Lee. a d Navajo Indian from Towaoc, Colo., and Shiproek, N.M., a Seventy now serving as president of the Arizona Holbrook Mission which includes ail of the vast Navajo Reservation in the Four Comers region of Arizona. Utah. New Mexico, and Colorado. He is the first American Indian to become a General Authority. yiv-- T& ( and police rushed in to find Franklyn Davis, the gang's leader, with a "serious, but 1 $6.75 for v- - , THE PRICE FOR MAILING a letter will rise from 10 to 13 cents on Dec. rt, trie Postal Service officially announced today. Pa,os for postcards will increase from 7 to 9 cents and parcel post will run about 10 percent more. A r, lail will increase from 13 to 17 cents an ounce, but primarily for packages. a native A. jy men surrendered later after which a shot rang out one-ounc- e, members. The three additional members of the First Quorum of Seventy, all of e whom become General Authorities of the Church, are: IllSlSM ' first-clas- s will Decontrol fear voiced by Mosi Bsm I DESPITE OBJECTIONS by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today voted 12-- 2 to publish four secret documents on U.S. committments to Israel and Fgypf. And the House Internationa! Relations Committee approved sending 230 Americans to the Sinai to monitor the peace accord, with a provision requiring Americans to be withdrawn immediately in the event of a new Mideast war. n ?i in the basement of a London restaurant for five days were released today, but the trio's ringleader shot himself in the stomach rather than surrender to police at the end of tne s siege. The six filed out of the spaghetti house looking fired, but apparently in good condition. Two gun- WITH A SLIGHT BOW, Japanese Emperor Hirohito today laid red and white carnations at The Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington Natlond Cemetery, where many of America's World War dead ere burled. In a toast to President Ford during a srate dinner Thursday night, Hirohito called the war "that most unfortunate war which I deeply ,1 deplore." 4 IDS authorities Gene R. Cook of Bountiful, executive secretary ol the First Council of the Seventy, becomes a member of September, THE NATIONAL SCHOOL LUNCH and Child Nutrition Act was vetoed today. by President Ford, who said it would add $1.2 billion to trie federal budget and "such fiscal irresponsibility" is Missionary effort stressed 1 in held HOSTAGES cap-five- dress, President Kimball touched on a variety of other topics, including the need for integrity; the wisdom of gardening; the importance of renewed patriotism during the American Bicentennial and the role of the church in relocating Vietnamese refugees. "Like a lighthouse beam flashing its warning of dangerous shoals ahead, there are many communicating signals today presaging the fact that the age is coming to its close. he warned. He stressed the importance of total chastity of men and women before marriage and tola! fidelity in marriage. "Sin is still sm and always will be. "We stand for a iile oi cleanliness, he declared "We abhor, with a!! our power, pornography and permissiveness and the freedom of the sexes, and we U ar that those who have advanced. See PRES. KIMBALL on Other Friday morning speakers Eider Robert L. Simpson Elder Hartman Rector Jr. Elder Vaughn J. Feathers- his SALES captive by three gunmen President Kimball sounds strong call to repentance y Senate lifts Turkey embargo -I SIX God-give- AUTO s. . buoyed by early introduction of some 1976 models, lumped about 13 percent over August and the imports' share of the market slipped below 23 percent for the fourth time this year. President Spencer W. Kimball addressed opening session of conference today. n Stressing his duty to cry repentance to all people, President sounded a Spencer W. Kimball-todastrong warning against immorality, abortion, divorce, alcohol and Sunday shopping, God is the same yesterday, today and forever, and He has never intended that we should change or update with our version the moral issues which He established long ago, the church leader said as he opened the 145th General Conference of the The Church ol Jesus Christ ol Latter-daSaints. President Kimball also announced that four new General Authorities would be presented to members of the church in afternoon sessions, including the first three members of a new Quorum of the Seventy and a new member of the First Council of the Seventy. (Story below.) Thousands of participants representing the churchs worldwide rnem- - 4 .ftrn-si-w- DOMESTIC 4 .1 A.A 'roi.i .Mec.ii. ! il ' or ifK: ,; testimony trial hiSupc 't '.V . j .' ,i e irri-w- ' tri ?U$Vt CfVit' i If rtovi-- ;ri--- ISicji Court, ehinmut l which defense e N w y 2oae 5 (Utah's Ui Fair, warm. Partly loudv and windy Saturday, Hiqhs near 9G lows about 5o. n- i. 9 lULKd b Car pc lams nn Gor n Jtan) County, -air. continued ni. rtr j A2 j 1 0 ut V C of M . G a.r. rM'! '5 8S Lows in tf. 40s, except cO55 ft i.akeFoweiL ?; cept near 8 at Mo jb. L' . 35 thyres fer at .amsncj worse. oz Muet? ihs iiirt ssiaUvJOn WIii map, 2sr-- cn C S "Sz ! Si fj 1 e$, niioN liVtii .4, 1 iv I 1 i VaH e y , fa ir. City) gat j n Gusty w;rdG, Cache Valfey. M; 30. Lows in the 4i per 30s. 3 2 one fWasatr Front ) Fasr, mhrf. Soi wincH 110 H;yt 80, fows li |