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Show r4 u ''"'. DESERET 12 B NEWS, Tuesday, August 5, 196? British Future? the private from nated industry wage, the arerage pay per month was $624 in $498 for private industry, state workers, said the USEA. The USEA study showed that employment in higher paying industries, such as mining and missile manufacturing has declined since 1958 in the while employment that indicating state employes earned a higher average wage . A report workers chalwas industry private lenged today. The report was contained in a bulletin of the Utah Taxtitled payers Association, State Salaries in Orbit. It that the average claimed state worker earned $498 a month during 1968, $32 higher than the average insured private worker. The Utah Slate Employes Association (USEA) said the comparison is unfair because the private sector has a higher proportion of unskilled. and workers which has part-tim- e a tendency to lower the average wage in that category. , When the traditionally retail trade and service industries ate elimi than in non-scho- lower-payin- retail g trade, service and garment-makin- g industries has increased. It said, the only reliable way to get a true picture of differentials between wage industries, firms or geographic areas is to compare wages paid to specific and identical occupations. However, the USEA said comparative wages by occupation are not readily available. lower-payin- USEA The acknowledged that the average state However, the actual dollar figure for state workers i3 less than in the private sector it or federal government, asserted. When the retail trade and service industries are excluded the average private industry pay in 1968 was $126 per month higher than the state wage and the federal government pay was $127 higher, said the USEA. It said the pay of Utahs 19 largest insured firms averaged $198 a month higher than state government pay non-scho- ol Army Resumes Gas Shipments senal, said arsenal is said the making an announcement of the phoswe gene shipments because don't want everybody to get panicked when they see these The DENVER (AP) Rocky Mountain Arsenal is .resuming "routine shipments 6f the poison gas, phosgene, which has been sold to private chemical companies. are .7 The steel containers Identical to those for nerve gas. A spokesman containers. Capt. Mike Abrahm, public Governor Calvin L. Ramp-towill be home from his European vacation only two days before he and Mrs. Hampton will need their B- -l be rated as a hawk, he said. He is bitterly hostile to Israel. He told me he would not recognize Israel even if Egypt did. Lord Thomson said he feels Israel must accept a comproWhile mise on Jerusalem. the Arabs do not admit they would accept such a situation, I believe in the final analysis they would. He said hostility between the Jews and Arabs is largely from the Arab side because they fear Israel will take over more Arab territory as the population increases. The Israelis deny this, saying they have ample room. Lord Thomson said he does not believe such enmity can be easily corrected and, even when a settlement is arrived at, hostilities will not cease completely. Both sides say they will not accept an imposed solution by the great powers, he said. We must But he warned, allow nothing to happen that will result in American or British boys fighting on the banks of the Suez Canal, in the Jordan Valley or in Israel. school government wage had increased faster percentagewise since 1953 and between 1967 and 1968 than the average for the other sectors. information officer for the arthe obsolete phosgene, which has industrial uses, was sold to Chemical Commodities Corp., of Olathe, Kan., and the Johes Chemical Co., Caledonia, N.Y., in April, 1968. honoring . the Apollo 11 astronauts Aug. 13 'in the of the Century ballroom Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles. Although vacationing ir Europe, the governor accepted the invitation, his office reported. Bell Urges Teacher Continued from Page R-- l an orderly opening of school, Bell said. the late date, if associations and school boards assume a sense of urgency . . . we can get schools open on time, Bell said. CITES NEED He emphasized the need for Despite teacher ingful negotiations act at the last legislature, he said. I would urge all school . leaders, board members, education association leaders and administrators to recognize that we are approaching an emergency situation which can be damaging to Utah eduBell said. We alcation, ready have lost the best time to negotiate free from pressure. The heat obviously will be on the rest of the month. OFFERS HELP Bell said the assistance of his staff and the resources of the State Board of Education are available to any school district needing third party assistance. We will be in constant contact with all school districts and education associations that have not com- Up to $25,000 for anything you can name. Seaboard Finance can now make big loans. Up to $25,000. And you can use the money however you like. amounts, if you need them, Want more information? just by picking up the phone. We can usually have your check in the mail the next day. To buy a camper or a boat. To build a vacation home. To add onto or fix up your present home. To send the children to college. Or most any personal or business need you have. And, once you have established credit with a Seaboard Big Money loan you can borrow smaller Yes. Im interested Kama Loan. in a pleted negotiations. Long said the School Boards Association would like to see reach an equitanegotiations and that, with ble solution the responsibility resting upon them by law, boards will do what is necessary to that will effect agreements truly be to the benefit of children. . . . We also pledge our association to help everyone with what difficulties there may be. ISSUES LISTED McCarty said he does not know of a local teacher association unwillinj to sit down and bargain continuously until the issues r:e resolved. Difin ferences estimates of money available, reluctance to lead the way, and purely local issues seem to be holding up negotiations, Bell said. . State . Phone the coupon. Either way, there's no obligation. . Addrwi City Call us, collect, from any place in Utah. Or mail us Zip. . . Seaboard Finance Company Salt Lake City, 447 S. Main St., Phone Murray, 5124 S. State St., Phone AM Otfkeg ata in; Brigham 335-756- 1, City, Clearfield, Logan, Ogden, Orem, Price and Provo. iHlead-Or- a; B-- l Die, 5 IHlyrt 2, T. LIDDELL By JOSEPH Deseret News Staff Writer - Two GRANTSVILLE cars compact at 2 a.m. crashed head-oeight today on U.S. miles west of Grantsville, killing two persons and seriously injuring five others. KILLED: He said, The lack of adeJudy Ann Tuttle, 21, Box quate air service is thwarting 397, Kimball, Neb., driver of our growth; is keeping us one car. pronounced dead at from realizing fully our potenthe scehe. tial; is threatening to reduce .Mrs. Virginia M. Tuttle, 41, us in comparison to our neighher mother, same address, boring competitors, Denver died shortly after arrival at and Phoenix, to the status of Tooele Valley Hospital. an also-raa satellite. of occupant KEY ISSUE the Tuttle car, Mike Tuttle, As the testimony proceeded, 17, suffered extensive head the key issue in the hearing injuries and was in serious emerged: whether any airline condition, today at Holy Cross which may be certified to Hospital in Salt Lake City. serve Salt Lake City will be a Also injured were transcontinental airline or an Charles seriously R. Dyson Sr., 40, 534 airline without service to the E. 14th St., New York City, East Coast. of the other car, his driver R. T. Robson, executive wife and two children. director of the University of Utah Highway Patrol Troopof Bureau Economic Utahs and Business Research, was er Dan Chidester said the on this eastbound Dyson car possibly questioned closely point when he testified that was attempting to pass anothtranscontinental service would er vehicle and met the Tuttle in the westbound car head-obe best for Utahs growth. lane. NOT AS FAST The three Tuttles were Prof. Robson said regional service carriers, while they thrown from their small two-docar as it veered off the have important linkages to road into a borrow pit. There Intermountain routes, cannot were no safety belts in the provide the fast and direct auto. connections to eastern mar credited kets that Utah needs. Troopers safety Robert S. Campbell Jr. is belts with saving the lives of representing the state as a Mr. and Mrs. Dyson m the front seat of their compact special assistant attorney genstation wagon. eral. The contention of the agenPINNED IX AUTO cies is that Salt Lake City Tlie impact of the crash should be given new transcondrove the left front wheel of tinental service. each auto back into the drivRep. Lloyds statement said ers seat and Mr. Dyson was Salt Lake City had less air in his car by wreckage pinned cities service than seven other pressed against his left ipg. Birof comparable size Truckers who stopped at the mingham, Columbus, Dayton, scene furnished pry bars to Louisville, Memphis, Phoenix free him. and San Antonio. Dyson suffered a broken left CITES NEEDS knee and oilier injuries. His Sen. Bennett emphasized wife, Mary Ann, 24, who is the need for improved airline seven months pregnant, sufservice because of Utahs air fered a broken pelvis. A son, cargo needs, its potential Cornelius, 13 months, suffered tourist expansion, its efforts a broken left leg and other to attract new industry, and injuries, and another son, the missionary travel needs of Charles Jr., 6, a possible broThe Church of Jesus Christ of ken back. All were listed in Latter-daSaints. serious condition today at And unlike many airports, Tooele Valley Hospitatl. he said, We are prepared Two ambulances transright now to receive the new ported the injured the 22 miles from the accident scene service we seek. Airlines that have applied to the Tooele hospital. for new service to Sajt Lake NO BRAKE MARKS City include Air West, AmeriA doctor from San Franciscan, Braniff, Continental, co pronounced Judy Ann Frontier, National, Northwest, Tuttle dead at the scene. Her TWA and Western. mother died shortly after arrival at the hospital. Trooper Chidester said no brake marks were made by the Tuttle car. Each auto spun a quarter turn after the impact and the Dyson car at right stopped upright OGDEN Ogden detectives angles, blocking traffic in the westbound lane. The Tuttle continued their investigation car was about 12 feet away today to determine whether two Ogden residents should be upright in the borrow pit. charged with cultivating mar- ijuana plants. The investigation was prompted by Detective Sgt. Larry Scott and Detective Merril Headrick who noticed the plants growing in a back yard at 2937 Lincoln Ave. while conducting a follow-uinvestigation on another case. Continued from Page BNames of the couple are furtime, Belcher had been the being withheld pending ther investigation and a deci- only occupant. sion from the county attorney on possible charges, police They were all isolated in insaid. dividual cells. The plants were visible Turner said the Californian from an alley behind the residence and from the Pingree had been placed in maximum of his Elementary School grounds security because trouble-makin- g nearby, Headrick said. foreign-mad- e n Another Negotiating McCarty also deplored the lack of a negotiations law. This is exactly the reason we were pushing for a mean- THE LOAN. Awtos Crash and Phoenix, and both enjoy superior airline service. The one glaring, inadequate, but critical component (in Utahs bid to attract industry) is our air transportation system, Smith continIf certificates are left ued. as they are, and we do not get competitive trunkline service into the markets under consideration, our air transportation will be woefully inadequate. than this. "YOU-NAME-I- T" ryyr'rrT'V'V'T T " Continued from Page traveling bags again. A formal invitation from President and Mrs Nixon arrived at the governors office Monday requesting his company at a formal dinner a teacher negotiations law, noting that such a measure would require the use of factfinding and mediation by a third party much earlier INTRODUCING (P"'f- Open On Air Routes A Traveling Man n Continued from Page non- -- Vital Talks State Employes Challenge Comparisons On Salary 'Bleak' ncn-scho- rrrrrr TTTTTTrrwTfr-r- ' TfT '' t ' V C - t tn 4 ; , '"M, - si i HftfOOD fcejscr CJ Z. y Police Check Weed Patch ftr05D Gft Continued irom Page B- -l decorator designed set reflects the excitement cf Spanish home fashions! Come in See our factory making this fine furniture . . . with boldly shaped style . . . Dramatic carved wood trim . . . Vibrantly color fabrics. Similar as pictured, with elegant tight back construction. Buy on Easy Terms. Regular Retail Value $559. Buy from Factory ond Save $280. This FURNITURE 2700 South State Open Friday & Monday Till 9 P.M. SHOWROOM hence, the greater people involvement with Medicare. The five urologists see many patients in the over-6bracket because that is the period when prostate gland disease begins for many men, Meads said. He said the two general practitioners work in areas where many retired persons live. The eye .specialists handle many cases of cataract suranother disorder seen gery frequently among the aged, according to the Blue Cross-Blu- e Shield official. He said the chest surgeon performed a lot of diagnostic work and lung cancer surgery lor elderly persons. Temple Aide Dies FuCALIF. will be held ' Wednesday and burial OAKLAND, neral services here ' 'I and graveside services Thursday, 3 p.m. in Salt Lake City Cemetery for William Paul S u mmerhays. 67, first erin-selin the , or Oakland Tern- presiden-Mr- . pie cy. Church of Jesus Sumnterhays of Latter-da- Sunday . Christ Saints. He died morning of a heart y attack. served four Summerhays years as director of the .Oakland Bureau of Information, assisted by his wife, Grace Callis Summerhays, whom he married Dec. 14, 1927, in the Salt Lake Temple. He served three years as a stake mission president 11 years as a high councilman, and in the stake presidency of Stake the Oakland-Berkelefor 6 years. He served a mission from 1925-2in the Southern States. Summerhays spent 30 years in governmental service in New York, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco. After 22 years of service as chief of the San Francisco office of the Federal Communications Commission, he resigned to become director of the of Information. The son of William H. and Lula Lindsay Summerhays. he was born May 28, 1902, in Taylorsville. He attended tfie University of Utah before moving to Oakland, where he resided at the time of his death. include his. widow; a son, Charles C., Lynnfield, Mass, two daughters, Mrs. Gary (Laura) Stay, Denver Mrs. William (Julia) Baker, Madrid, Spain; 10 grandchildren mother, three brothers, Preston L Lawrence L., Melvin L., five sisters, Gwen L Mrs Jas. E. (Helen) Wise, Mrs. Emma S. Mrs. Walker, G. Lloyd (Norma) Purrington, all of Salt Lake City Mrs. Leon P. (Marjorie) Menlo Hovik, Park, Calif. y 7 Bu--re- ' Survivors t physician who with Blue Cross-Blu- e Shield, said Medicare payments to are studied to physicians insure that they are justified. said the physireceived $16,000 last year practices in an area of the popwhere ulation are indigent. He said Utahs doctors averaged about $1,000 in Medicaid fees last year. The average fee for prodocviders of Medicare two-thir- tors, laboratories and surgical suply houses was Belcher was imprisoned Dec. 19, 1967. When the convict refused to pass out his food Monday evening, prison officials decided to let him cool off during the' night and attempt to retrieve it this morning. Clayson discovered the tunnel after he went to investi- gaie the presence of element' dust and rocks in an unfinished utility tunnel beneath security area. F he noticed an empty mop cover. Looking beneath it he found the aborIn Cellblock full-tim- Holbrook cian who activities. the maximum practiced in Salt Lake City e until taking his post $3,435 last year in Utah. Medicare payments for the year amounted to $4,356,558. t 1 a Meads, 5 Magnificent Spanish Sofa and Love Seat Both for Oakland With Sharp Spoon p Medicare Fees Called 'Justified' GGscisQ The deaths sent the Utah toll to 175, 33 ahead of the number killed on the highways at this time last year. traffic Felon Stabs Guard repeated Sera dio il&Ml a (iXSQK partment. n -l 'i Assisting Trooper Chidester in the investigation was Sgt. and tie Howard Cooper Tooele County Sheriifs De- tive escape tunnel. Four of the six convicts in F took part in a mass prison, in November 1968, escape according to Turner. The other two were recently caught while trying to escape by hiding in empty garbage cans, he said. Take Sound Gear Someone entered the Stake Center, 4220 Mill-cree- 420 k S.' East, recently and took over $900 worth of sound Albert Dazley, equipment. building supervisor, said. Several doors were unlocked.' ' , according to Dazley. I |