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Show . AJi The Salt Lake Tribune, Tuesday, April 19, 1860 Carmichael 1MK HE'LL EVER HE CAtfT THAI IlEARH KEEP EVERY KIR mi HE BRIH6-- 5 Young Couple Found Safe On Mountain r , ' ' . By George , A SEATTLE April 1$ young couple feared lost' on blizZardy Mt Rainier was fodnd Monday tramping down a ridge road nedr Ohanepe-cosh- , a hot springs on the c . mountain side. Preston Macy, Ml Rainier National Park' superintendent,' said Bob Working, 21, Seattle, . Oh, Boy! My favorite! 'Apple pie ashes! and Clara Marie Mitchell, 22, of Milford, N.H, were In good condition despite their more than 50 hours on .the 14,410-foo- t peak. New Yeirlc Time Service Two rangers met the pair defense summation, and as they came down the road NEW YORK, April 18--The Wednesday to the government and radioed the news to defense rested Monday In the He would- deliver his own -A. Macy. Income, tax "evasion trial of charge Thursday morning, he , . Details were sketchy but Representative Adam Clayton said. Macy said, the couple, both ex- Powell Jf. AFTER THE Jury had left ..rT perienced mountaineers, had overruled a demoved their camp. when a bliz- ' Federal Judge Frederick Judge Bryan fense motion to' dismiss the Van Pelt Bryan told the Jury,. zard swept over the mountain. he hoped to give the case indictment He reserved deciAPPARENTLY the two to them for decision Thurs- sion on a second defense mostarted down the mountain day morning.' tion for a directed verdict of from the 10,000-foo- t acquitaL This latter action will - Camp Muir site to a more sheltered Judge Bryan told the. Jury permit him to ' throw out a area, then proceeded toward before dismissing them until jury verdict of guilty if he beMonday's Tuesday morning at 10:30 that lieves It conflicts with the law Ohanepecoshln : storm. he was alloting Tuesday for and the evidence. Defense Rests in Tax Trial . VOLUNTEER attorney Edward Kent said he was confident he .could still get a stay of execution by appealing to the trial Judge, Edward Martino, for a new trial on the basis of new evidence. ' Meyner was told by Kent that the condemned men were not. attempting a robbery when they killed a Camowner in 1958. den - 18-Fo- Communists were organizing , in 'the automobile factories In 1937 had been engineered - tlTely by them. :!You never can tell," he said, where youll find their fine Italian hand, and Its not Italian Its Russian." Truman said evidence of Communist influence In the auto, sitdowns had been developed by the Senate War Contracts Investigating Committee which he headed. The former president presented this view as he 'reiterated that, while he thought businessmen should serve all customers, he opposed demonstrators shutting up a mans place of business. - Its not all students fault he said. Clubwomen from over the nation will Join In a salute to the widow of the former President at a banquet during the convention In Washington June ' Mrs. Dassinger, a states rights candidate for presidential elector in Alabamas May 3 Democratic primary, said Alabama clubwomen should stay away from the banquet because they did not have a voice in .this nomination. , - Mrs. Roosevelt was one of the sponsors of a recent advertisement in the New York Times which was critical Bar- -- 13-1- . Hit Wl 81 IN THE POSITION TO SELL FINEST ouAunr DIAMONDS AND DIAMOND JEWE18Y WITH ' 1SJ MA8K-U- Easy Terns P - ' of the" National Council of Churches and an outspoken foe of segregation, said it was difficult for UJS. churchmen to take a stand on the South African racial crisis as long as they r do not support the s In the South. Blake spoke on "The moral responsibility of the church in a secular society at the BLAKE, A former president Divinity School. ROCHESTER, N.Y., April 18 (UPIF - Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, chief executive of the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S., charged Monday night that threats and intimidation are being used to try to silence ministers and church leaders on segregation and other social issues. -- victed under the robbery-murde-r statute which does not require the prosecution to prove premeditation. THE MEN ABE Sylvester Johnson, 24, the triggerman; Stanley Cassidy, 28, and Wayne Godfrey, 30, all of Camden, lunch-counte- sit-in- May ... x 4 S V .... t. , t 'rwiS'T' jT ; Vi ' b v 'A V! - HE SAID HE thought the these demonstrations just as a ; Senate Investigation had shown that the first sitdowns MISSISSIPPI Gov. Ross nett will be the principal speaker at the dinner. Church Leader Raps Threats con- C Ntw York Time Service rmer ITHACA, N.Y April President Harry S Truman expressed the belle! here Monday that Communists were engineering the student sitdowns at lunch counters in the south. e , Ah Alabama clubwoman urged her fellow members Monday to boycott a tribute to Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt Mrs. Melvin Dassinger of Coosada, a director of the Alabama Federation of Woipens Clubs, issued a statement protesting the decision of the national federation to honor Mrs. Roosevelt at its national convention. of Alabama. the he argued, gomery County Citizens Coun. cil will sponsor a dinner here April 25 to raise funds foe carrying the propa--; ganda battle Into the North." . . toy-sho- p Therefore, , South to Launch Race Publicity montgomery.au, 18 (UPI) -.- The Mont, April ALA., April 18 MONTGOMERY, TRENTON, 'N.J., April 18 Robert B. Mey-ne- r Monday refused to postpone Tuesday's scheduled execution of three men after conferring with a defense lawyer' and three opponents of capital punishment trio should not have been Press By Associated TUPI)-Go- v. 4 Truman Sees Red Hand In Sitdowns Bam a Woman Hits Mrs. FDR Tribute' Mercy Pleas Denied for Trio in N.J. , By Associated Press HoMe? .. Poor Pop ' i s v - - . V, W w f t V ' f . I. 7 t... 'J1-1- . :? ,X V., i rAM A v ... AM f X:: ' A xj A WxSM Mm: W ,v . s vy? Truman spoke at V news conference held shortly before he, told a large Cornell University audience here Monday night that the presidency was the most difficult Job in history." : Salt fakir 143 8 oath Mein Dial EM ..... ' Katebllshed April la 1871. 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