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Show 4 ?23L DAILY HERALD s' 1960 .Arnold Dixon, 76 Readers Court Life-Lon- g Sfocc Market Resident of FURNISHED BY J. A. HOGLE AND COMPANY J Industrials Dow Jones Averages: Thtwsdsa.v'a Total Open: .11 23.51 , 6.13 33 66,16 136.33 .59 N T S S ACTIVE STOCKS Volume Close" Chffg .Complete t 17Z Asm. Cable .180,300 ior , 13 Stud Pack .173,100 l4ft Stud Pack wi ,116,300 10 !. 23 92,300 Comptometer . rT 67,900 Telautograph ;V M El and I ..' 50,100", ."7.-V Hupp Corp ... 56,700 ' oy-Chemway Op . ' 55.100 2 iUNCH 52,500. Gram Paige Am T and. T 39,400; - i' li - Prosper Oil Mng, 1700 at .03 Rico Argentine, 60 at 1.80 ;: Sage ' Oil, 1.000 at .40 MUTUAL FUNDS .Thursday Qpuotations : Bid 7.43 Affil Fund' Div Shares ; . .'. ..... 2.99 13.36 Odn Gen Fund' v . .. i 11 .37 Chem Fund E and H.Bal'Fund .'11.30 E and H Stk Fund .12.06 - """V .... Alum Ltd 55 ...... Amer Smelt 97 Amer T and T ..... 43 Beth Steel o.x si Cater Trac. . 4f Chrysler Denver and R G ..... if,, Dow Chem .H?,4 195 Vl Hit Pnnl! - 8.02 3,28 14So 12.29 12.00 12.89 ' .9.98 55 97 43 25 43 .......... .......... Kod El Paso . . Firestone . Ford Motor Gen Elec- Gen Foods Gen Mtr . Good Year Gulf Oil F'-S- t 83 194 125 33. 33 Va 66 Va 82 2 68 45 . ! ' 37 " Kenneoott Min Mn Mfj? Monsan Chem Mont Ward Natl Cash Reg Natl Steel N Y Cen R R . Pac G and El . 28 79 72 39 32 59 Va .74 ........ .. . .... . 9120 Parke J C Penney . . . Penn R R' v .' . . Fhill Pete. . . . ..Proct and Gam ... R C A. Repiib Steel . . . '. . . . . Sears Uni-versity- 57 44 - . - 40 . 78 36 27 31 ...... or Russell Company. Mr. Dixon received his education in Provo City Schools and at the Brigham Young Academy. During the past two- years Mr. Dixon had made his home with his eldest son, Howard B. Dixon of Provo. Survivors include his 10 children: Howard B. Dixon, Provo; Mrs. Don H. (Evelyn) Smith, Honolulu, Hawaii; Captain Grant D. Dixon, Ladd Air "Force Base, Fairbanks, Alaska; Eldon A. Dixon, Brigham City; Bruce R, Dixon, Provo; Floyd ' P.t Dixon, Provo; Mrs. Thomas W. (Gloria) Richardson, San Jose, Calif.; Robert N. Dixon, Orem; Douglas W. Dixon, Provo; and Mrs. Bruce J, (Doris) Christansen, San Jose, Calif.; 28 grandchildren. The funeral services will be held Tuesday at 12 noon in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel; Ralph Fletcher, bishop of the Provo Third LDS Ward, will officiate. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to services. Interment will be in the Provo City Cemetery. retired after 40 years of teaching. She attended school in Taylors 127, vilie and studied at the University. ei of: Utah and Brighairr Young 61' 56 She had traveled exten 44 40 sively in the United States and" 78 abroad. , 36 26 Miss Webster, who formerly rei-32 at 827 Wilminigton Ave., was sided I 80 an active meiruber of the LDS 1 ... cashier at the' Farmers and Merchants Bank and later worked as a bookkeeper for several local firms and most recently at Dixon-Tayl- 12 "61 Thiokol Un Pacific Unit Air Line .. Unit Park City US Steel .v . ...... Utah P and L West Air Line ; . . Westg Elec ... . . ", ; 47 126 ....... 68' 43 44 12: 47 Std Oil Cal , . Std Oil N J Texaco Inc' ; . ; s . . . 74. 19 , 1 80 .36'Vv 20 54 68 36 21 54 i Church. Surviving are three brothers James A Daniel W. both of Salt SALT; LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE Lake City and George W. of Lind Bid Asked say, Calif. Thursdays . . . . . . 15.75 ...Qpuotations: Banner ie.25 Friends may call ' tonight from . .08 .08 Bristol Silver .4 b to 6 pm. and Saturday prior, to 1.00 .92 Cardiff .05: Central Std f.04 services. Burial, will be in the 0 1.05 Chief Con 17 16 Silver .... Taylorsvllle Claytin Cemetery. 30. .19 Con Eureka ..... . WooJrworth 8 . . Cochise Entr' . . . Crof f Crown Point i . . . .. Dragon . !. . , ...... i . East Crown. Pnt , . . :; .East 'Std--.-.--. Bast Utah . .. . . Empire Mines - JS0 XX ,0 .03 .04 jso" .08 . ........ ' 41 . .03 1.55 - 2 .04 .03 .15 . . , .35 50 1.05 1.00 ...... ......... WUHston. .75' .02 .03 .14 .30 .44 Tintic Std West Toledo The Payson American Legion, post 48, will hold a Homecoming Party Sat, Sept. 3, at the Legion Memorial Hall. A smorgasbord supper!- will be served , and there will be danc ing to live music. Members are asked to bring guests. There will be a charge of $3 per couple. .06 ........ ........ 150 ........ j01 .03 Con .... m .06 .08 Rail .09 ALT LAKEv STOCK EXCHANGE SALES: Banner Mng, 100 at 16.00 Big Hill. 500 at .29 Cons Eureka. 1,000 at .10 E Standard, 2.000 at .02 - East Utah 1650 at .18 Eur Lilly Con, 2,000 at .11 Eur- Standard, 30 at 2 Grand Dep, 4,000 at .04; 500 at Little May, 1,000 at .05; 2,000 at Nortii Lily, 200 at .92 1 .04 .05 ' (Continued from Page. One) morning when top TWU officers will tour striking . locals. Two Republican legislators said out. , . X ;Sen. John J. Williams, said the situation is "unquestionably a national emergency." Sen. Jacob K. Javits, RrTf.Y., suggest ed the President appoint a-- factfinding unit to study the impasse, an action similar to .the one Eisenhower took in the steel dispute earlier ' this year. . : Railroad men in Chicago' said it was too early to determine how the strike will affect freight shipments. See Little Difficulty Two automobile manufacturers! in Detroit saw little difficulty for the present front .the PRR shut-- i down. A General Motors spokes-- l man j said the strike "ultimately" would affect production of Buicks, Oldsmobiles'' and Pontiacs at the company's Linden, N.J. plant but no other production difficulties were expected. R-De- CALL ON THESE FIRMS FOR Expert Service If Ton Give Expert Service, Order Your Inexpensive Ad to Run Here Regularly l.f : : .; lv ALTERATIONS CUTLER'S 447 North '..i-'F- 2nd West, Men's, Ladies Tailoring. AUTO GLASS 21. BROKEN class replaced ' Specialized . efficient work Ahlander Mfg Co. 490 South University . FR BICYCLES AND TRICYCLES FERGUSON'S Bike Shop, Schwinn dealer New used, trade in. Re- South . Stat 795 pairs, parts .FR. 'used, 3-3- BICYCLE,1 New repairs. Roy's Bike Shop Schwinn Dealer West 1st South FR 2 1744. : 1070 BULLDOZER ANY PURPOSE CARRYALL work, grading, leveling, " etc. FR. J" Call or'Phil Ivie. lip Bey 91 - . v .' 34. Ike, Khrushchev CABINET WORK REMODEL vour old kitchen for less. for estimates, call AC (Continued from Page One) ' ,L FURNACES . . New York," predicted Rep. RoFURNACES and air ducts cleaned, man "It'll be just Pucinski, l. modern equipment, call McEwan. 50. D-H- FR , , . i as hot as the rioting in Japan President Eisenhower. against There'll be a security; problem." But Rep. W.R. Poage told a reporter "I think we can " protect him all right." : FURRIER HELEN S wens en Furs "restyled, re- ' paired, stored, cleaned and glazed 131 North University FR HOME. IMPROVEMENTS REMODELING, roofing, siding, garages, will finance. For estimates - ' call AC , HORSE SHOEING CUSTOM horse shoeing and break Niel Biggs. ing. FR PAPERHANGING ; PAPER HANGING and painting. All Work guaranteed, FR or . D-Te- x., " - , 1 50. Reader's Court THE VERDICT No, The court "said awild animal becomes fair game for capture as soon as he escapes, even if he FR hasn't ;gone back to bis'ttatural ROOFING habdtait. Even in the unfamiliar -WE repair roofs, fix leaks, reroof Atlantic, said JJhe court, the sea houses Also siding and remodeling lion bad full freedom to go where Phone FR 28 - ' - RADIATORS REPAIRED RADIATORS repaired rebuilt, clean- ed or recored. Specialized efficient Ahlander Mfg Co., workmanship. 490 South University , FR he pleased. (State laws vary.). I960,- General Features Corp.) (Copyright 63. - . TW radios; record players, tape re--. guaranteed service, Wakefield's. RALPH'S Radio and TV 81 South 3rd West. FR Over 25 veari ggyice in Utah County a-- x x v , quamiea service, nepairs anytime. y guaranteed. FR AT 1 1 A. I - , .:: . el? 71 Send FLOWERS - jgfllMtfW p i. FR B. Hodson. ' i SPRAYING JACOBSEN. Spray".. Service. Phone FR expert insect ex-' vxermxnauon- teed. ROHBOCK .SONS FLORAL ;.! - - - .xxcemsea ' ; 1 ana xuaxaxt-- A K Utah Obituaries SALT LAKE CITY James Roy Hendrix, 72, 1415 Woodland Ave., died Thursday; funeral Tips From Utah Editor gj i So. State, Orem DIAJ AC 1042 1 00 . jl yj 2 Saturday e article writTips for ers, particularly applying to his own publication, were given the Provo chapter, League of "Utah Writers, this week by Roy Hudson, editor of the Salt Lake Tribune's Home Magazine. Mr. Hudson, a former Provoan, gave valuable advice on freelancing to his audience, much of which could be applied generally. The group discussed plans for attending the 25th annual Roundup to' be staged this year by the statewide League of Utah Writers in Ogden Sept. 9, 10 and 11. Anyr one interested' in writing may attend, with membership in the league not a requirement. Full details will be announced soon in the daily press. free-lanc- s l Payson Flower Show Grows With Harvest Days Fete : , " Patients Listed At Hospital In American Fork p.m., Wilson-BatMortuary, Ely, Nev. John Banks MCOmie, 86, 1556 Indiana Jve., died Wednesday; funeral Saturday 10 a.m., Poplar Grove Third LDS Ward. Mrs. Alice Caroline Trowbridge Reed, 76, 1192 Milton Ave., funeral Saturday, 2 p.m. Bryan LDS Ward : Chapel. Jen-sin-a Maria Dreehouse, 77, 561 Grant St., died Thursday; funeral Saturday 10 a.m. 260 E. S. Temple. OGDEN Infant Edwards, son of Darwin E. and Connie Broad-beEdwards 3405 Washington died Blvd., Wednesday. Ray Woodson, 14, 2831 Pingree, died Tuesday; funeral Saturday 11s a.m., New'Zion Baptist .Church. HUNTINGTON Rboda Mathie, 72, died Wednesday; funeral SatFirst urday, 1 p.m., Huntington ' LDS Ward Chapel. WELLSVILLE Mary Jane Wyatt, day-ol- d daughter of James B. and Susanne Sullivan Wyatt, died Thursday; graveside rites Wellsville Saturday, v U a.m., ' ' ' Cemetery. SOOFIELD Mrs. Henrietta (Aiti) Thompson Helsten, 86, died Wednesday; funeral Sunday, 2 p.m., schofield LDS Ward Chapel. MYTON Infant son of William D. and Hene Morrill Olson, died Wednesday; funeral Saturday, 3 p.m., Roosevelt City Ceme' tery. .. es nt , MIDVALE Krantz, 64, Wednesday. Paul Anthony 176 S. Grant St., died SM3THFIELD John Henry Meikle, 86, died Wednesday; fu- Wage Bill Killed The Senate bill would have permitted President Eisenhower to eliminate; the "windfall"' sugar marketing quota of the Dominican Republic. Under present law, the President may. be forced1 to 0 allow importation of an extra tons from the Dominican Re322,-00- p.m., Smithfield 1 Chapel. liberal-conservati- ; ; June ' 13. ."' . Mr: and Mrs. W. D . Ball and daughter, Carol Sue Clark, are making plans to spend the coming Labor Day weekend In Nevada visiting such interesting, spots as Virginia City, Carson, etc. j He was born 1877, ,1. Aug. mmm f . Lebanon, Va., a son of George t . - The family of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Merely, Provo, have disFuller Cowan. persed after a family reunion which brought them together for the He m a first time In five years. At a dinner held during the week all of the ied children and grandchildren were served as follows: Mr. find Mrs.;, Myrtle B.l a c Stewart Morley and six children, Bur lin game, Calif. J the Melvin March 17, 1902 in Wichita, Taylors with two children from John Day, Ore.; Mrs. Diane Kuhn,' children from Kallau, Oafao, Hawaii and the Gerald Morleys of Salt, Kan: He receiv Lake City. The event also noted Kim Taylor's second bitrhday annl- -i ed his educa- - - stir, towau tion in Lebanon and moved with versary, a grandchild. A few days before .the family joined for the his family to Orlando. Okla.. marriage of son, Gerald. . ' , , where he worked with his father as a farmer and rancher and Alan Enke, son of MrJ'and Mrs. Glen L. Enke, Provo, senior., later attended the business col- track star of Provo High School was bitten by a black widow spider sometime during Wednesday night. He is at Utah Valley Hospital lege in Gunthrie. Following his marriage, he where he has received adequate treatment; in time, according to made his home in Colorado his parents. .'I... .. '.. " ' : . T Springs, Colo., where he worked for the Telluride Mill. Mrs. Diane Kuhn and children, Mark and Debbie, who have been In 1904 he was employed by making theiri home in Provo for the past three years have left now. the D&RG Railroad and was sta- for Los Altos Calif., wher Mr. Kuhn has accepted a position as . tioned at Colton, moving to Provo school teacherJ ', in 1907. While with the railroad, he worked as clerk, cashier and Linda Anderson, daughter of the Dean A. Andersons, Provo, Is baggage man, retiring "in 1942. He packed and ready ;to leave today for college. Miss Anderson will also worked for a year at the attend the College of the Pacific at Stockton, Calif- - Mrs. Anderson Geneva Plant of U. S. Steet and daughter, Merrily, will drive her to school. had come to Provo in 1907. He was a member of the Provo Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Maloney of Provo were among a group of BPOE, Lodge 847, Rio Grande 10 returning vacationers after a tour of Alaska. The group traveled Veterans Club" and Provo Community Church. Horse, Juneau, etc. Mrs. Sytha Roberts and her sister, Mrs. Ger-He enjoyed walking, raised trude Rasmussen, former Provoans, were on the list as was Mrs.' vegetables and fruit and had done Catherine Strate of Columibia, who Is known here. Mrs. EJoise considerable painting following Morley directed the group. his retirement. ' , '.'; Surviving are his. wife, son and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin M. Dupalx and daughter, Lorrie, are in' daughters, George JR., San Dego, the last stages of preparation for their anticipated vacation. They Calif.; Mrs. Ernest (Alice) Saler- will leave Sept. 5 for Cleveland, O., to spend two weeks with Mrs. no, , Mrs. Earl (Ada) Frizzfeil, Dupaix's parents, Mr, and' Mrs. William Rampelt and other family 11 members. Provo; 11 grandchildren; v " i ''"-' a ' greatgrandchildren sister, . . !T Mrs. Sally La ben, ' Bristol, Tenn. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis E. Anderson and family are anticipating Funeral services will be Satur- a reunion with Mrs. Anderson's mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. day at 2 p.m'. in the Berg Draw- Willard J. Jones of Salt Lake City when they meet them there this ing , Room Chapel with Rev. Don- weekend, as the Joneses retorn, tour of Europe. ' after a ald Mills, pastor of the Provo The travelers 75 ' 77 of and' have reported a wonderful age years ' Community Church 'conducting. ' T , , experienee. Friends may call Friday from . I' "'''i" i ,,":' 6 to 8 p.m. and Saturday prior The family of J. D. Batty of Provo will meet for reunion over the to. services. Interment will be in weekend at Heber at the home of a daughter and husband, Mr. and the Provo City Cemetery. ' Mrs. Grant Webster.' Mr. and Mrs. Miles Batty and family of PrpvO are expected, together with' other relatives from Murray, Pleasant Grove and Vernal. Sarah and R. . 1 rr It-w- , - ' ', I ; -- -. ; . j , - ... j ,- .!, '" ' ' A T . . . six-wee- k's .... I , Most Will Rest on Labor Day ' ' House quests of Mrs. Robert L., Wilson in Payson are her daugt ter, Mrs. Dan (Naomi) Higginbotiham, who has enjoyed a two week visit, and Mrs Higginbotham'e daughter, Mrs. Gordon (Doll) Sullivan and four children, all of Proenix, Ariz. Husbands of both ladies . are expected to arrive here and join them for the return trip. j , and Rosalie Betts Skinner, 4083 W. 4865 S., died Tuesday; graveside funeral Friday. 12:15 p.m.. Evergreen Cemetery, Springville, Elsinore Mrs. Myrtle R. Lorensen, 66, died Monday; funeral Saturday 1 p.m., Elsinore LDS Ward Chapel.' Engineer Named On Underpass Job For Orem Freeway William Wotherspoon, manager of the Provo Chamber of Commerce, said stores which customarily remain open late on Monday night will observe the late closing on Tuesday next week. Provo will have no formal Labor Day celebration. Central Utah, however, will be spotlighted on that day with two of the state's top Labor Day celebrations scheduled at Payson and American Fork. spending more 'than,. 'two weeks in Hawaii, where they of Nelda's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Swapp. formerly of BYU, is head! of the music department Junior College located' several miles from Honolulu. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. La vard Wright, Payson. i Wedding receptions as low aa $25, Timp Dining Room, FR 51. (adv.).i Wedding gifts, Christensen's Gift Shop, 141 North University1: ' - (adv.). . , were guests Mr. Swapp, at the LDS Sally is a The Daily Iferald has an opening for a part-timsociety reporter it Springville. Please contact N. L. Christensen, editor, (advi). Stray e City Contribution to Y' Campus Police Cut Off (Continued from Page One) about 100 left behind, for various camp duties. The howitzer is a mammoth weapon that can fire . conventional high explosives or shells with nuclear warheads. The conventional, shell weighs 200 pounds, , Frovo City will continue to upof "which about 36.75 pounds Is its standards for police ofhigh ; explosive. The gun ; weighs grade ficers and pay will be commensu94,000 pounds and has, a maximurate with ability, City Manager m-range of 18,510 yards, just Edward J; Connell said today. over 10 miles. ' ' He said r he did not believe in ' Cause Not Known ; unJt was not known what caused police status equivalent with skilled labor or truck drivers. A the shell to miss its charted imofficer can drive a truck, pact area on' the range, and hit police but a man joff a you . can't take the. occupied tent camp area. he! said. to do truck work, police Pick 58 Shell 5th pgh Maj. Gen. Provo Police Chief Jesse Evans has long complained of difficulty (Continued from Page One) in LIGHTNING KILLS TWO recruiting good men at Provo "The collapse of order is the SUMMERVJLLE,-S.C- . police keeppay, and difficulty-i(UPI) purpose of Soviet : policy," he James H. Suddeth, 45,, and L. D. ing them after they are trained. It said, "a collapse which is a con- Eure,. 76, were killed by lightning usually takes several years for dition precedent to, their hoped-fo- r Thursday when they took refuge an officer to develop judgment hew order of Communist con- under a tree on the Summerville and' a thorough knowledge of his 1 trol." '. : golf course during a thunderstorm. job, he said. .Ni-kit-a' Herter said '.Soviet IPremier Manager Pledges Upgraded Proyo Police Department ch , . . . n The city council this week voted to cease contributing $2400 a year to Brigham Young University security department (campus po-- , lice). The university now has Ian adequate unit of its own to police, said Chief Evans. its own campus, . f r Provo police will continue to cooperate dosely with the BYJU, .se. . curity unit, he said.1 Provo police department, always inadequately staffed by national, police department standards, re-cently lost two more officers. One resigned to continue college studies; the other was terminated by j the city. . -' j ... ' : . j " . A WIIEU YOU'RE LOU Oil DOUGH i ... Underwood - Olivetti ed . Calculator - Berg U Chain Link Fence U 1 jt'seaper'than you think' ( Call Us Today for a (( U )) FREE ESTIMATE & Service ( V Y Bullock Sales 1 illti N. Stat Orem. AC J , 261 CLEARANCE AT NAYLOR AUTO Inc. DODGE DARTS and DODGE BETTER DEALS NOW! DON'T MtSS OUT, GET V. . NAYLOR AUTO Inc. YOURS NOW AT 145 W. 3rd S. PROVO Mortuary; SERVI CE S: Emmy Laastad, services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel. Friends may call at Berg Mortuary prior to , services. Interment will be in the Provo v City Cemetery. , is a high speed calculator- with -- - rotary printing and a memory, entirely new in conception and design. It not only performs (automatically) each of the four basic operations in arithmetic; it also performs them in combined operations, without requiring the of inter- re-ent- ry . nisi" si !V i Mi ' f , ' j Exclusive Dealer for 265 W. CENTER , 4. Easy to Get Easy to Repay! " ma J K rz- - ' nccirc pniiiPrimT S Gene Taylor or Christensen Kun Underwood-Olivet- ti FR 3-49- 20 7 CONFIDENTIAl0u J; ( n ; QUICK CONVENIENT Mr mediate figures. "V Pi , ) -.. " . YEAR END j . ! x court-appoint- , ' " ' ' " j" ' Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams bid" goodbye on Monday to their Ira F. Cowan, 83,- died Thurs day in a Salt Lake hospital fol son, Carroll, his wife, Lola and their nine children who left for their lowing brain surgery Aug.. 22 for home in Mesa, Ariz., after a vacation spent in the Provo area. They injuries he received in a fall on were entertained at the home of numerous relatives while here. Herter Zu-pa- n, 63 - - ve 3-S5- day, and close Monday, buti a' Donna Rae Skin- detailed v u Sally j, Wright and her room-ntat- e, Nelda Swapp, both employed would requires a' ner, infant dauigihter of Don A. study of listing In Las Vegas, Nev., returned to the mainland Wednesday after individual advertising. public. The Senate was advised, how ever, that the Chief Executive bad no desire to recall Congress to deal with the sugar problenv barring some international crisis; Overall, Kennedy won little of what he and Johnson put down as "musts", for the extra' session. David Mabel Thorne, KathA deadlock arine Ferre, Reed. Carlson, Gardiner, killed Kennedy's bill to boost the Archie Boren, Ruby Christensen. minimum wage 'from $1 an hour LeM f LeRay Gates, Gina to $1.25 and broaden its coverage. Keith Norman, Elsie Kay Conservative opposition also litn-ite- d Gates,' ;Wayne Gates, Farrell B. the scope of the" final ; bill. Bowersj Adla Willis, Maxine Ch'at-wi- n. providing medical aid for the aged, and scuttled federal aid for Orem! Carolyn Stewart, Beatschools. Walker. rice Major accomplishment of the Provo Carl Marchesi, Marlene period was enact Carter, ment of the second major civil S. Khrushchev tried to set Leland C. Montague. Payson Connde Jean Johnson, himself up Jn the" Congo as "a' Tooele rights bill to become law since reconstruction days. The 1960 law, Opal Johnson. court of last resort, beyond a postscript to that passed in 1957, Janet OUsen. above," "and .outside the U.N." Oregon ref priveds for 'We seek he said, "to move erees to safeguard Negro ' voting not as toward .a world of lawOFFERS COFFEE BREAK . rights. a remote and abstract goal, but . CLARION, Iowa .(UPD Wright a ' that ,"we are beginsomething J County Sheriff Bob Blecker has to ning ; now through aocomplish STORM HITS TOKYO invited Labor Day weekend mospecific tangible steps." apd TOKYO (UPI) A severe elec- torists to drop in (or a cup of storm Thursday trical night coffee and a "rest stop." Blecker caused flash floods, 36 fires, and started his coffee break campaign blacked out more than 300,000 on holiday weekends four years ago. homes throughout Tokyo. 4 FR M HALL KEARNS Maurice G. Anderson has been named resident engSneer of the project to construct a three-spa- n beam underpass on the Interstate IS freeway "at 1600 North in Orem. Announcement was made today AMERICAN FORK -j- - Patients in by Jim West, American Fork, state American Fork Hospital recently road district engineer. i Mr. Anderson will have headhave been: American Fork Zane Withers, quarters at the American Fork Nile R. Johnson, Blanche Ounning-ham- , district bflfiices of the road com. M. H. Ingersoil, Gilbert R. mission. to The. was let Irene Sykes, Phyllis Nash, underpass job Merkley, ' Rosenlof Construction Company of Rosemary Richards, Jean Rurch, Vera B. Adams, Lori Ann Smith, Orem on its low bid of $213,056. Alice Whitman, David Whitman, The underpass will be 214, feet "in Edna Boley.. length and the contractor has; 200 Grove HuntsPleasant Dale working days to complete it. man, Mary Lavaliee, Earl Loader, . R By BIILDRED Mr. and Mrs.. Robert Beck Clark have returned, to New Haven, Conn., after spending the last month visiting in Provo with Mr. and LDS Fourth Ward Chapel. Mrs. Beck Clark and Mr.-- and Mrs. Wendell Anderson of Richfield.' SAUNA Mrs. Sarah (MagProvo stores, generally will be She will teach in the New Haven High School while Mr. Clark, who gie) Williams Rasmussen, 92, closed on Monday, is a physics major, will attend Yale University. House guests at the died Wednesday; funeral Sunday but there will be xLabor Day, Clark home have also been Mr. and Mrs. Wade Horn of San Iandro, exceptions'.1 2 pjm., Salina Third LDS Ward Some plan to remain open Suh-- 1 Calif., who stayed for several days. ' neral Saturday j ; 1 - REMODELING . i- 'S s Writers Get ' . . ( - . . ? j - ALL typsvsidinavand roofing. Room additions, fireptsces, patios. Nothing down, 4' years to pay. Phone 1 ; 92, . I this page." . . RADIO AND TV REPAIR ; , newly renovated for the opening and health bills. He accused them of school. Once a small part of of playing politics with civil the Payson Homecoming celebration, it has grown with years un, rights. til it is one of the outstanding amounthad what Repubicans ed to the last word, however. Flower Shows , of the entire They forced the Democratic lead- state. Flower growers of the area are ership to, raise a Senate quorum shortly before midnight in oppos- displaying Hhedr prize blooms ing what they branded as a final Sunday beginning at 1 p.m. and "political" measure to set up a Monday following the. parade at the Payson Junior High under a study of political broadcasts. The first and more productive theme, 'From' Pony Express to part of the 'I960 session ran 118 Jet," ..with Mrs. Enma Fech as Committee members days, from Jan. 6 until both chairman. are Mrs. Donna 3 Stewart, Flower two houses quit on July for the ' Club Garden president, Mrs. political conventions. Naoma Hillman, Mrs. Gwen PorThe Senate returned on Aug. 8 Mrs. Martha Chard, Mrs. ter, and the House came back Aug. Gloria Harnett, Mrs., Effie Mil15 for the extra session. But like Mrs. Helen Laird, Mrs. former President Truman's "tur- ler, Ethel Decker and Mrs. Virginia nip day" special session of 1948, EsteL it was marked by political frusTrophies and other awards will tration. be given by Payson business was cinched when Adjournment firms. to House the refused take further action on a measure dealing with U.S. policy toward the Dominican regime of Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo-a- nd let the bill die. pre-convent- ion 53. . c. PAYSON The Payson Flower Show will be seen in the setting of the Payson High School gym, (Continued from Page One) , Thornton, HU the-Atlanti- .UTAmroiiMTV i J . yesterday that additional labor legislation should be adopted, if necessary, to deal with the" walk- - I Congress Goes Party PAYSON -- 4 .05 .60 .02 Park City jrroopex .,...:. Silver .King West . South Std k. . Homecoming .03 A9 .08 .17 12 .38 . j15 4 Payson Legion Sets 5 '.09 AS Eureka Buillion Eureka Lilly Con . . .5-reaWestern ' . . . .. i Kennebec ' Majestic Oil ...... New Park : North Lily North Std t .06 , ; , , . . . . earl y LDS Temple. She died in 1965. He was a High Priest and an active member of the LDS Church. For many years he was a 8,95 7th S. Miss Webster died Wednesday in a Salt Lake rest home of natural Causes. She had also worked in Taylors- ville and Provo districts and had 72 67 43 43 Da-- 14.37 16.02 16.16 Funeral services for Emma Jane Webster," 8S, veteran Salt Lake and Granite District, school teacher will be held tomorrow at" noon at 36. E. 40 32 59 19 " , , 68 45 38 28 79 Va "ft Dixon, - 82 1 . : i 35 68 35 . J. y " Ned owned a sea lion,1 which he had on display at an eastern resort. One' night the creature escaped into' the ocean. But a few months later, a fisherman brought in the very same sea lion identified by his unusual markings. .'. Ned promptly sued to get him back. "I was the original owner," he argued in court, "and I didn't let him go on purpose. So he is still my property just like a, lost dog" "But. dogs i are tame," countered the fisherman. "When a wild creature like this one escapes, the owner loses title. He is fair game for anyone who captures him." : "That might be true," conceded Ned, "if this jsea lion had ever returned to his natural habitat. But he belonged in the Pacific; not He was originally caught off the coast of California.' tJntil he actually got back to the Pacific?, he was still technically mine." , IS NED ENTITLED. TO HE SEA LION? Weigh ' both sides; Then mark your verdict: ' YES O ,. NO j , . For the actual court decision, see () verdict elsewhere Provo pioneers. He mar r i e d Mr. Dixon May Banks' on Nov. 15, 1911. in the Salt Lake oh Funeral Services Set Tomorrow For Former Resident 15 . after , 31 3-- : ' Asked 26 26 I I Fund Investors, . . 9.11 Incorp Inv . . ,. . ; 8.51 13.29 Mass Inv Trust Mass Inv Growth ' . 14.82 14.87 Putman Fund Thursday Friday Own Telev and Elec ... 8 .29 Close Allia Chasm g Thurs- : NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGER QUOTATIONS: life-lon- Valley Hos a pital short illness. He was born May 30, 1884, in Provo and was the last surviving child of Henry A. and .Sarah DeGrey 32 20 207.42 .03 s . ii--;,:- -- at Utah -- I ', . day evening, 207.72 3 a 76, resident of Provo,"" died 65 15 136.7S UNCH Arnold Dixon, Stocks Utilities . 20 fin! 3,460,000 326.10 Friday' Rails By. WILL BERNARD , . Provo Dies Member of New York Stock Exchong Volume ; Around and About Ira F. Cowan Succumbs In Salt Lake it |