Show - -' 1 ' 1 For Clas's'ifiea 521-353- Phone 5 C le (J Alw v t !g i'ril I 4 It Suits All Tastes 0 'flio ill Rolls Other Tribune departthents: News 363-15information 2 scores 355 7511: 355-751- -- other departments 1 363-152- Vol 5 195 No it'-- 1 !1( it'll' 41Hli ''''iiel 1 f-C- Salt Lake City Utah— Tuesday Morning —July 102 Price Ten Cents 19437 11 What a parade and what a day for a parade! The annual event known as the Days of '47 Parade started on the mark' at 9 am Monday and for 212 hours spectators — numbering as high as 200000 persons according to police estimates — were enthralled dazzled and fascinated by a profusion of colors and the blare of bands Utah's history Went on review and a rich pioneer heritage few states can equal was remembered in many ways and iin many colors But though the past was noted the present and future were portrayed too as many small and large business firms and clubs made mention of the slate's growing industrial prominence ''' I $ 1 -- ' -- ' :a 4 1116 '':11-- ' I '' 172 l - ': I -- - '' : - z- i ' ' i ' ''' f it i' t ' 7: ' 4 A t ' 1 4- 4 y I t : 76 - ''''''''" '‘'' '' ' 4 irr: ' '' j ' ' - : i fo i - i ''' i l'ir71 t' 1"'11-rt- ' fl :i i :4-- '1 1'1 - ': '" r' I'll 1 7''''''''' '' --- ' : ''' ' ' i i ' ''' '! 7 4 T: 1 ritm 4 ' ' '''' i '' '' ' ''' ' Z' '':l t""!f ' ' '' '' ' - tt I 58- - v -" '' r i "r I: I ' i:4 ki-A-!- 'f‘ i4 tf'p ' i 4 'v ' s1'' '' '''' 1 4 !F4-- - r !'4":-'''' 47' ' t: r :It - f ''' li ''' ': l''' :' 1 '' 7 v ' ' 4 '1!: 7 ' NJ: r rti ' '4 I' 4 '" - te''' 4': 1 - r''''''' 4 ' ' - ::' ' 7 ::'''' 7:: ': ' ' -- '"'---- ' - '' ' '- 4 - )I4'' - ' '' ' - ' L1 tt- :: — -- —-- -- '' 1 '''''! -- i '' ii:2j: 'i '':' L17'::( - :: 2 : i " 4 4-- 1 f'""-'- '7 it ': ' : ' ' ) :i '' '' ' - i ' ' i "' ' ' Monday as Days of '47 parade thrilled thousands Spectators agreed: it was "tops" g float-maker- Bigger Than Ever The parade was termed by officials " and in the number of entries it was that at least The 84 floats numbered 10 more than last year and at least two more bands played for the young and Colors used were infinite in variety though many floats which caught the eye were in traditional favored combinations and ''bigger-than-ever- young-at-hea- rt Rioting Ramp an in Harlem Michigan 5 NEW YORK (AP) — Two thousand Puerto Ricans surged through block upon block in the congested heart of Spanish Harlem Monday night in a third successive night of smashing looting and burning For the first time police were the targets of rooftop snipers Two deaths were attributed to the renewed violence the worst in the city so far this summer A youth and woman were killed Twelve a persons were listed as injured — including three policemen "We're working off frustrations" a youthful rioter told a plainclothesman confrontation As during a brief curb-sid- e they spoke the youth's companions were letting air from the tires of a police car teen-age- Riots Encompass Bands and Floats In all 22 bands and 84 floats marched and blided down Main Street from the Brigham Young Monument to Ninth South and then east to Liberty Park where the parade disbanded Many floats however remained on See Page 1 Column 1 74 d In Blocks T he rioting extended from 95th Street to 121st Street first along Third Avenue and then extending in pockets east to Second and First Avenues and west to Lexington and Park Avenues The entire area encompasses more than 125 city blocks For the second night Jose Torres for mer world's boxing champion took to the streets trying to assist police in dissuading the rioters "They think the colored people got a lot you know by violence and they want to do the same thing" he said of the Canadian French Ifail De Gaulle Separatism Talk night after winand some fires reported at several business places The scene of the trouble took place in an area about 112 miles from downtown Chicago Tribune Service - MONTREAL — French President Charles de Gaulle continued to enflame the spirit of separatism in Quebec with suggestive speeches Monday as he rode In a mile-lonmotorcade over the route of the 17th century King's Highway from Quebec city to Montreal Crowds weie smaller than the Quebec government had tried to bring out for him but they were responsive as he stopped at a half dozen places along 160 miles of the north shore of the St Lawrence River to urge French Canadians to become masters of their own destiny with the help of France About 1500 persons stood in rain in front of a village church at Donnacona to hear De Gaulle tell them "Quebec is a country becoming its own master" "You are doing this" he said to "I can feel it It is indispensable for a country to take its destiny into its own hands A people must depend on themselves" g ---cheers- - At Three Rivers the largest city before Montreal De Gaulle was greeted by the largest crowd organized for him by Premier Daniel Johnson's Union National Government and the nationalistic St John the Baptist Societyl "France has a duty to help Quebec obtain the mastery of its own destiny" the French leader said The crowd shouted its approval and cried "Vive De Gaulle" youthful mobs Broken glass carpeted the avenues members of where helmeted the police department's Tactical Patrol Force fought to gain the upper hand over the riotersi d Bricks 4T1 -- 11 ‘) -- '' LI '51 t-i--4 7 avenue 11- 1 r:-- 4' Firebombs were hurled police were with bottles and an American Broadcasting Co news car was over belted -- tl: t 1 -L t i "r4 '': s 4-:- 1 r-'-- --- - t tVirt1 I r i 4 - 4- i I 4 e 4 0 -1- k 1 - 1 1 t sit I t- h 1 - l 9 I ' j 'z' 4 ' 7 ' I 1 I A I Opi 'fi '‘ -- - I t c t 4 'rod a y's' Chuckle f -- r -- ' - t: ' 4144:-- F 4 4 k149 p ": - s4 ht ' j 4 ':'' ' ' ' - "s i 4 1 i i T - t tI I ' t I '''' k 1 -3 4 ki - t i- i ' ' I I' It k 2 tv ''"' - -- 4 t i -- I 'L'1-- '8 ' '- ' ' --: ' ' - t' - t ' - ''72'''''''' i - c' '''' 11 ' 1 i- -- 4 's ' ' q --v ' rtt r r' 464411e' - "" xr--f 1 - 'Uvtip i $ ' ' '1' s :'' $4I e : ' 4 ' t I - ' 1c fr : ' k ' - '4 - 4 1 ' ' 1 ''- ' ttk 4 '' J 4 :' 'N - -: N4 - k6 I 1s1" N' 1 A 1 1 4 11 14 - - a 1 s"'"''s o' settors Smashed windows provided simple access to store provisions by bands of wanderers ' 1 Shot - g 0 0 I 1 - y ' on the East Side See rage 12 Column 3 of battling - t On the Inside ' oP : - iated Press Photographer Eddie Reports it '‘ 2 Guardsmen element" 4 Abo riot-tor- n '" ' along and po- Adams a veteran of front-lin- e photograsaw two Guardsmen phy in Vietnam shot down in a exchange of spal radic gunfire at one Intersection he "ThueWne thweerGeuapriansnmedeu saidi dpouwn" out got out of there Their radio told them 'Shoot anything that moves' " Mayor Cavanagh said the embattled city "looks like Berlin in 1915 or Warsaw after the Ghetto uprising This is an lawless explosion of the completely '1 —Assoziated Prom WirephOtO With no police in sight looters had no trouble in helping themselves to stock of liquor in Detroit's crklanere battles intensified Guardsmen opened fire with machineguns mounted on armored personnel carriers A raging gunfight blazed within a mile of the affluent Grosse Pointe several miles east of the main trouble center go i t ' IN ' hateur ekeds tt in Y'a4 1- v 4 : - 4" s ( 4r-r- '4ImIt''1 aexpressway ft' As the lw ' ' 1 '44 i 1( v:lt tr ti f '' r tp i 1 - ! Il 1 li 4-- 4 - ' '' 11 ''' t I t 1 i J tt - "The situation is more serious than it has been and it certainly makes this action very much needed" Gov George Romney told newsmen Romney and Mayor Jerome Cavangh appeared with Vance at the news confer- t4 1 : ' k- 1 s e s ---- 4 ' 0 qt ''' 418 J I ' i1 a0 $ v ' P 4 4 -- - - t Or1 k 4 P - i ' it: I - "II- t '"'" ':4' : f-- ostoh Jt ' '- ' shours '1 -: 144rAsst 'X "' 12i- i ''44t ' ' : iz i k ' nSecretary 11 $ 13 ' ti i - : - ' 4 c - ''''i-'"- l it choked : : constants surveillance u by National i Guardsmen and rifles pointed police straight at the driver Every 10 blocks or so drivers were ordered out hands on top of the car for a thorough search President Johnson ordered in the troops after Cyrus Vance special assist- t S br eDReo McNamara told i s t the dmIn tuh n had e t few "' " ' ' Women screamed from apartments at each volley of gunfire car trying to get through was ndAenr - Business Classified Comics Days of '17 818-- 9 Sears Section Utlittiritbist Foreign National Obituaries Valentine Washington 0 ' Page Page Society Sports Star Gazer Television '" ' 1 :L il t x iZ' 7 i i : 6vt "' ' 1- ' ' 11' 1 ig i's'ic :c tur 4 ' 2-- 't 1 11- - o 017 ‘ i - :i ' : ' ' : ' I fr!i 'ti i - e - 41 A --- - - ' ' 4 l'°q ov1 e wl ! 1 le ' 4 1 fr ''' L 'tri ' ‘ - : t" -- ' 'i II ) x ' '' 1 '"f 1 A : r: 4 t ( v r ' 1 1 i't 'aa - 4Nk t 1 t ' ' 4 it i 44Ns4e-t-- iks 4 1 r ' few t p - v El 1'14"1 -- --- --s k ?4t — t ' 'oo ' 'I 1 I -- Salesman to customers examining a television set "The tag refers to city state and federal taxes madam The price is additional" :- ' - c'' 11) i ' ' Oefft4'"47 :' -1- "14:4eft I i 1 t ' 04kos‘ ' 4 s '' 4 ''t - kAV'''' Il4t i A I 1 i I "' r- 4 - - - : ' - -1 it 1' " - - ry- '111 4 6 - raik L iiltt:tt-- ii ' : - vetI ) it ' 4(' "' I --- --- N tel 1- S': 4 ‘e-- 1 -- I it I 4 ik 41 40 AL '"' ' '' r7v - 0- -1 ' In Washington President Johnson said he had ordered the troops itt'be cause domestic violence and disorder N ' were obstructing the execution of law Ile the Defense Department to ordered ) take "all necessary action to disperse all h 1 persons engaged in acts of violence and I restore law and order" (See story Page ty 4-- ! ' - i I" :- 1: 1 I to' - 1 - 4 i ' -i1- tt 4 ''''''''7----- ' " t A '''' 1 0 i - '''' 1 -- or 't 1 41k i k ' 1 ence -" t- ' 1 ' i ' - tkN-- ''" '' ''''' ' - 3 ' - Keep Close Watch day morning '- t'- i E:41 L 5 l l - - t) td'''') 1 ' : s '' - - ''' 'It ' ''' 0 ii -- :f c z T-- "':'!' VP4'' - '' 7 ii ''- : - ' tk 1 - - lice cars their lights out sped at 7Q and 80 miles an hour toward areas of heavy sniper fire in the riot area were deserted pruteipfet:r small pockets of people near the zones g 1r1- --- 4Eca - '1 - 41A-'"- I - -' 7 171-1- -' nt' t't ' '' ":' t f I : - -- - m-t- t 4 - ' 14 - x14 0 ' ' - - t( ' : ' '4 1 Hurl Firebombs Shoot at Police i 1 11-- t' 01e:01 v- -i d a K 0s1 ! ' ''" I 44 1- tirt1 - sonnel Street lights uere stoned as rioters sought to deepen the darkness of a hot muggy midsummer's night The rioting spread along Third Avnue from 95th Street to 112th Street Helmeted members of the Tactical Patrol Force of the police department fought for the upper hand amid a carpet of broken glass that glittered along the 3 t4t F 'r Bottles Pelt Firemen Firebombs were hurled from streets and rooftops and firemen pelted with bricks and bottles as they worked to contain the blazes Police emptied their revolvers in the direction of the harassers atop buildings An American Broadcasting Co mobile news unit Was overturned and set afire There were no injuries to network per- ''''''''X' 40 Itl 1 )414 ) 1 "P'""'' '"""""""""' - 1 the 1964' Rochester police said the man was Toledo 1 the night after the Rochester riots of n con- still Expressway which Numerous reports of shooting fires came from throughout and area the some 25 miles north of riot-torDetroit ' Fire bombs were tossed at a hardIsolated was shooting reported ware store and school building but the Police throughout Pontiac's south side were quickly extinguished blazes Chief William Hanger said arsonists have During the second straight night of set a dozen buildings ablaze Sheriff's men blocked US 10 the main disturbances this week police reported Negro youths were setting fires to at highway leading into town to incoming least three buildings occupied by Puerto traffic families in the area' Rican Hanger said looting was reported on Officers were dispatched to the trouPontiac's South Side where there is a bled area as a gang of nearly 200 Negro heavy Negro population on the street corners State Police sheriff's men and police youths gathered off the same cordoned Police from nearby communities were called to area as Sunday night control outbreaks: scattered the help The violence flared late Sunday and The violence followed a mass meeting quick action by 400 helmeted police was i and Negroes Monday between 75 whites credited with keeping the disturbances trying to decide how to avert the kind of from secspreading outside the rioting that hit Detroit tion and shot Three Negroes were ROCHESTER NY (UPI) — An uniwounded early Monday numerous stores dentified Negro was shot and killed Monday night as racial violence spread over were looted and gangs of youths roamed the city streets pelting cars and buses a wide area of this upstate New York with stones into the early hours of MonCity Police said about 100 persons were involved in the disturbance in this city '' just 50 miles south of Detroit A police dispatcher said early Tuesday that most of the trouble appeared to be under control At least four persons were arrested on charges of disorderly 'i conduct he said No major fires were reported but police said many false alarms had been turned in A number of small fires were '1 1 - - - years PONTIAC MICH (AP) — Looters and arsonists struck Monday night in Pontiac an Oakland County city of 82200 near ht I 0 bottle-throwin- g — Police - - Debris Litters Streets - smoke dead on arrival at St Mary's Hospital after a shooting incident in the predomi- - Pontiac Arsonists- Police sought to contain the crowd by firing shots above their heads The mob looted a filling station after vainly trying to set it afire The pattern and looting began of Puerto Rican was a after early Sunday shot to death by a policeman in Toledo's '''''::9:::' '11' heaviest turned and set afire There were no injuries to the network personnel At one point a police car was reported under ' gunfire TOLEDO OHIO (AP) verged on a Negro area South Side late Monday dow smashings lootings broke out in the area - under "heavy siege" He said that at had been wounded in In the early us tnotstlttroGarueaarsdsmen 1 Mob 9-- 000 Strowrn Fires Loots NY - 1: The dead firemen had been fighting a blaze on the East Side only a few blocks from the 5th Pollee Precinct which Was under seige for three hours by snipers The seige was lifted after National Guardsmen stormed a hotel across broad Jefferson Avenue using a tank and two big trucks Major William Dansby public relations officer for the Michigan National Guard said the 7th Precinct on the Near East Side and the 10th at the core of the area where trouble erupted Sunday were I - -- ' ''''' ': f ''! '1: 1? I' ' - arsonists past 500 Property damage mounted swiftly over 150 million dollars as firemen overtaxed and barred from many areas by snipers were forced to let fires rage ' ! ' 1 Debris-litterestreets were bathed in the glow of new fires that boosted the total number of blazes set by looters and k " ': ':: ! t'' - Mon- 1 - i: ':- - ' ' ::' '' t 1 k : ' - ''' 1 f - ' i- ''''' 1 A' ' l ' :' ' ' t : 't ::' Associated Press Writer k ' :: ' By Don McKee 7rt ''' ' - -' d -- ' :: ' ::- i'l4 - '''' ''''' ef 4 7:- ' rr-- 0o : ' 4 : 4 More ::' ' - '41 j ' - 4 -- -- - 4: '' 44 '::: ' i 41 - ers rolled into this beleagured city ' J ' e4 i i 1 ' : - 5 f '1 rrr : crowds This telephoto shot looking south down Main Street shows what it was all about hands floats and flags — and more down the street to delight of rolled floats They rode in a black limousine and spectators so clustered around the auto at the start of the parade that it was momentarily delayed in getting into the lineup The annual extravaganza carried no s found no overall theme but lack of topics Typical of themes were the architecture of the Salt Lake LDS Temple and of the Tabernacle the construction Among those were "The Temple" depicting the laying of the temple foundation in 1867 (Millcreek Third Ward) "The Great Tabernacle" noting that survey work for the structure began in 1867 (Murray 12th Ward) and "William H Publishes Church Architect Folsom Plans for the tabernacle" (Holladay Ninth Ward) '''' 4 - 11:s '"'" '' 1 Crowds Black Limousine - ' ' ' :' 1 ' ''- : ' 1 '' N '" ' ! ' ': !'' i 1: i '' 1 i:s iil k ' '' ' 't ' Saints and Mrs McKay :' : H r - ' 71 4 I II ::: ' i r 11 x ' :::7' ':' :1 - 4 H ''' - N- 1r '4 i if' S'7ix: i)it: - --' l' ik 7: a imor a ' : ::- I'l --- 1 ''::c1i1S-94- ! i ""' '' ::44g I 1 :: 1 - ' zt 1 DETROIT — Crack Army paratroop-- 1 4 ' t Await Calf s t t $7 ' 3000 t ' lig 1 : 'rt twl 4 : '' 7li '? ri ii - l'41 0 ill f KT 4'1 i a'A'''4A 0- ': 1''' ''" ' 91 1 ': ''''''' ivii- i' 'r r4 2 k day night to help police and National Guardsmen quash two days and two "41!' i' nights of wild rioting i i 11 The first 1800 US 1 nterolo3ipisti: ron: inAzearde from the 101st 'I' Li a -- 1 :t t 4 e ditional 3000 stood ready at nearby Self14 '71 2 1 '!1' 4 ridge Air Force Base — - At '' f 01 '4''': I — leasj three police precincts in wide-ii44 1 I I 1 ly separated sections of the city were :! irol i beseiged by snipers as the toll of dead i ?am $ rose to 17 A fireman snot down by a sniper and a civilian were the latest to die l' ILL oil- - 11 :' t! 4 '' '1: 1 i '' 1 - '''''t i' i I3' 1 - P 1 t '' tnSI' 1 7-- 4 t'l17'' :i' 5i - 44 i iv pti x s Ti 'I :r: ' ''' ' S ! 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I - J :iiilt '''' --20''- Aotiosr t Zii' 09- -7 7 ' ' -- -- k I 7--1 ' : :'?''' 11 :: " ''ibi"‘ i - -- t: 'sill '''' l '' ''' ri ': 74-- :': ti'''-'''''- f'' ' "-1 i 1 44'' two-mil- e y c - r ?L11 7i ' ' - '''44-- ( I 4— i '4i '''''''''''''''' ''''' ' - 'i '''''' - ' : ''' "''''''tii4i''!-- J High-steppin- g ing Indians in : 4 : :4' - i': -:S:64''': t ti - :' :::p t -- t '' ri ' ' 1'' I 'M ' ' ' !:' f"7"":"--- L' 0 7: : d- - '' A '” ' I 'k :'f1"'114-S- :pk ! 1 ' ri '''''' 1 yit-- ' :it l''' ' 1 - trzt 4‘ r : ': ':I- k- '' ': J447 'ii t t 4 '''41':lik :tr")11017 ts1' 11' ''7i!'1 -: - ' - 4- $ ‘' ' ' 1 ' ' 1i'':'§)OV- '' It 2 '''' '' i J "Irti'17':'7'-'-' ' ' ' ' :' ': ''''" 74 t a ::: '''''' : t'' ' l' ' ' A : 1 '""'' p- t '' 1 I I' '' :' " -- t ' '1i:' ' :' t t - - :' tv'' t'' ts43' ' ' 7‘ V ' ' '4 t- 4 t' ' '' :: -- ' 4 r i!!7:0 7t 1111 2 et :7 '' ' rit 4i$4 4I 1 j r ' c ' r 440-- 17 drum majorettes dancnative costumes prancing horses with flashy trappings and pretty girls — dozens and dozens of them — were all there along the parade's traditional route And the weather couldn't have been ' better As announcer Frank Nebeker called out "Start the parade" the temperature was a pleasant 72 degrees Never did the temperature exceed 80 degrees during the parade a departure from past years when the thermometer has flirted with 85- - and readings Among officials heading the parade were President David McKay of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- ": '' A All Were There - 77:771 777:777: 1 :7 I all-o- - c rrl t Tribune Staff Writer ' t1 t t t etrol itznp6ag'e By Dave Jonsson I t 1 SL Hearts - Salt Lake City and Utah— Partly cloudy with a fewc scattered showers warm Weather map on Page B-- 2 - -7 Bn181 Theaters 1 t ' 1 C1-- 7 11-- 1 |