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Show CAVE-IN VICTIMS LAST JUTES SET Robert F. Hoine And John Dazanche Mourned Hy Many Funeral services for two miners min-ers killed in a cave-in from a bank a few yards east of the office of-fice of United States Smelting Refining and Mining company mine at upper Bingham Tuesday afternoon have been arranged. Robert F. Hoine, 23, Bingham high school and Westminster college col-lege football star, and John Dazanche, Da-zanche, 51, veteran Wyoming and Utah miner, were the victims of the earth slide. Funeral services for Mr. Dazanche Da-zanche will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Holy Rosary Catholic Cath-olic church, Father C. E. Hogan officiating. Recitation of the rosary ro-sary will be conducted at eight o'clock tonight at the Bingham Mortuary chapel. Interment will be in Mt. Calvary cemetery. Services for Mr. Hoine are being be-ing arranged at the Bingham high school auditorium Sunday at 1 p.m. with Bishop David C. Lyon in charge. Dazanche and Hoine wera working a lease from the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Mi-ning company, reclaiming old ore workings. They were digging at the base of the old dump when approximately 20 tons of rock and muck broke loose and covered cover-ed the two miners four feet deep. Cause of death was suffocation, the physician called to the scene said. The miners were last seen a-bout a-bout 2:30 p.m. and were missed about 3:30 p.m. A crew of miners min-ers recovered the bodies an hour later. Mr. Hoine was born in Hermo-sa Hermo-sa Beach, Cal., November 13, 1915, and came to Bingham Canyon Can-yon with his parents 12 years ago. He had been at the mine for several " months," before that he was at Hidden Treasure mine. He married Darlene Larsen of Bingham in Las Vegas, Nev., September 8, 1938, when he was employed by an oil company. Besides his widow, survivors are his Barents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank O. Hoine; a brother, Fred Hoine, all of Bingham, and a sister, sis-ter, Mrs. E. V. Ferry of Portland, Oregon. Mr. Dazanche was born in Go-zanto, Go-zanto, Italy, in 1888, and came to Bingham in 1910. He served 18 months with the United States Sta-tes army in the World war and later was employed at coal mines in Cumberland and Oakley, Wyo. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Madeleine Dazanche; a daughter, Mary Dazanche; a son, Bruno Dazanche, all of Bingham, and a sister, Miss Mary Dazanche of Italy. |