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Show i. .) 4 DAILY HER A IV n n.I?tl-- ; HJESDAY, MSCEMEBER Utah county; Utah Stock Market FURNISHED Jons Dow . , Average Total Volume ' 3.810,000 Ooen: Vueetlay's ' . HOGLE AND COMPANY York Stock Exchange 1 . i 20 15 65 OVER THE COUNTER I ; . j Bid Asked Tuesday's Quotations: 14.87 13.62 Albertson's. ... ' 14.87 Va 43 .500 5Va 13.75 Azitec Oil ... ... Bank of Amer 55.75 r t 57J2a icni 8, 33 .900 4.25 4.87 ,s Bonanza Air ' . Chrysler . . . 1 8.00 9.00 Lack .... 33,100 3 Brownainig Arms Rock Island . 31,800 JHi UNCH OMzens Util B ... 23.00 24.75 . V U S Steel Cons Freight 11.75 13.00 31,600 47 f . 32 8.00 Deseret Pharmac 9.00 Gillette 31,300 ;: ' 111 0 'a . 10 37 Eovuity OU 30,800 32 Sperry Rand f jnasrbhJM Cam . 30.300 46 2.25 y Federal Res 17 45.00 ... 43.00 First Sec NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE 9.00 Inv . . . 8.00 First Sec Corp . 9 AO 10 JO Frontier Rfg QUOTATIONS 106.00 pet Cv Bd .. 1O0.OO Monday Tuesday Fron 6' Mtr 17.75 Line Intrsts 160 JAW , Allied Chemical, . . . . . 11.50 12.75 Lockhart 42'4 NAHia Chemical . . 15 4.50 4.75 Magna lS4 22 Palomar 6.50 7J50 .'Aluminum Ltd '...... . . 22 Palomar 7S W Wts 150.00 ? 170.00 44 American Can , Palomar &'i 75 .150.00 170.00 American Cyanimid W,V2 46. 4.75 20 20Va Speed ee Mart 5.50 A M F Straza 114 113 Amer T and T '6.00 6.50 AmericaTi Tobacco 30 V4 30 V. Utah Concrete 70 30 30 Arizona Pub Serv NEW 23 amd YORK S Fe Atch T Investor (UPI) Beth Steel ,. 31 Funds included: Group 17 Brunswick 22 Intercontinental 5.64 6.10 2a Cessna 69 69 Chrysler 10.67 11.54 Mutual 54 Conoco 44 50 Stocks 16.95 18.93 50 Corn Pet Rfjf 1 19 Denver and R & W i Selective 1017 10.88 57 58 Dow Chemical Variable 6.02 6.51 . Du Pont 2314 231 107 .East Kodak 16 El Paso 44 45 rtand Motor General Electric . . , . 74 74,a 74 General Foods . . . . . . 74 55 General Motor 55'a Good Year 32 32 Gulf Oil . 39 Iwt Harv 43 '2 Irvt Nick . . . . . . 64. 64 4 Johns Man 45 Kenmeatrtt Copper . . . 67 67a Korvetite SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) 30 A 29 Min Mn Mfg 53 53 old Ogden youth facing , Monean Chemical . . 48 48 33 33 Montgtomery Ward . . charges of mail theft entered an Mtn Fuel Supply . . 34 4 344 innocent plea Monday in U.S.Dis-tri1 NY Central R R ... 32 15i OMn Math Court here. 32 Pac G and El 30 29 Brooke H. Chase asked for a Parke Davis 26 26 non-jur- y trial. Chase is accused J C Permey 43 43 Perm R R . 13 13 a letter containing $8.35 of stealing 50 Phillips Petroleum . 50 ' 71 from a railroad mail car at Ogden 7T Proctor end Gamble 56 RCA: 564 Aug.' 9. 36 T 36 ftapufottc. Steel Revton 43 42 . Reynolds 1 Tobacco . . 42 4 Seam and Roebuck . 74 74, 56 56 Socony Mobil Std Oil Gal ,. 64 64 N Oil .; etd 56 56 J (Continued from Page One) . Texaco Inc 57 57 ThJoloc Chem 29 29 later this month or early; next Timk R Bearing 52 50i Tranaatner 43 Si year, with more to follow later. Trt Con Corp 43 '42 The U.S. Air Force at WiesUn Carbide 103 103 Union Pacific 34 34 baden, Germany, said about 200 Uasited Air Line 32 ,33 American airmen are still flying United Park City ... 1 V S Steel 47 '46 for the Indian govmissions daily Utah P and L 35 35 12 C130 in ernment Hercules trans30 West, Air JJne .30J West Bancorp 31 31 port planes. 31 Westingnouse dec . WooJworth During the first week of the op67 67 eration, the U.S. group airlifted AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE more than 5,000 Indian troops Wuotartions: Bid .Asked mnsDoro one million pounds of supplies and ,4 Bunker Rill i 8 9 in support of Inand Mine equipment 5 Day 5 Hecla Mng 14 14 the Air Force defense dia's effort, Mtn Sta T and T . . 26 said. New Park ... 232 2 55 Fatddinglon 55 Col. Charles W. Howe, Ventura, Rico Argentine . . . . 1 commander of the group, TechmioolorCalif., 9 Utah Idaho- Sugar . i. 8 "8 expressed full satisfaction with the ... '8 DO ,'4 V1,DUU Gen Mtrs . . . . - i4 -- ; . . . . . . . . . . ..... . 75 . . 88 . . i . Ogden Youth Pleads Innocent , - ? .88 To Mail Theft 19-ye- ar . ct Soviet MIGs . ........ ...... . . ......... V operation, which he said has been conducted thus far without mis- Ogden Livestock hap.' OGDEN (UPI)- - Livestock: Cattle 2,000; slaughter steers and heifers" steady to "25 higher; cows steady to strong, instances 25 high r; Bulls steady; feeder cattle fully steady; slaughter steers mostly good 950 - 1300 lbs. 24.25 - 26.00; slaughter, heifers good and choice 5 lbs. 23.50-2y.7.cows utility and commercial 13.50-169- 0 ; bulls utility and commercial Calves 250; vealers scarce, feeder steady; good calves about steady; choice steers 27.50-33.0good and 0 cnoice lb. heifers 24.00-750-98- 0; 16.70-19.0- 25.00-26.0- 0. 0; 250-500jl- b. 0; 300-50- 28.50. S Bogs 150; butchers under 240 lbs steady to 25 higher;, over 240 lbs. weak to 25 lower; U.S. 2 around 215 lbs. 17.75; sows steady to 25 0 lbs. .12.00- lower; U.S. 1-- 325-45- -3 14.00. Nehru said there may be some delay in delivery of the first fighters because of the Cuban and general world situations not Red China but there is "no question of the Soviet Union backing out of, its commitments." ' Defense Minister Y. B. Chavan supported this. "The Soviet Union has agreed to supply some MIGs in December or a little later, some next year and .some later," Chavan declared. He did not give any figures. Nehru said press reports that the MIG contract had. been withdrawn by the Soviets because of Chinese opposition were in error. There is some little difficulty about delivery," he said. "That has nothing to do with China but the whole situation, particularly in the Caribbean Sea." Nehru also reported that the communist Chinese fired on re treating Indians at least three times after Peking proclaimed its ; 1 Sheep 1,200; slaughter l a m b steady to 25 lower; choice wooled cease-fir- e Nov. 21. 0 lbs. 190-19.8around 105 . Nehru said he could not say lbs., 19.95, - 20.00; slaughter ewes this whether comprised a deliberfully steady; utility and good wool of ate violation the cease-fir- e but 5.50-7.2ed feeder lambs steady, if the fired Indians that upon choice 5 lbs. for 'shearing 18.50have "every right to defend them 19.10. ' selves." . newspaper The independent Times of India said the Commu nists "openly indulged in ceasefire violations, presumably ,to improve their over-all- strategic posi(Continued from Page One) tion" wherever possible without utes that' Small had a cardiac ar resort to major military' opers 100-11- 0; 5; 85-9- i ..' Nephi '' Cafe A vi ''.'' I f Men Die j ; f "Yes. ., i! She said that Mr. Wilkinson had threatened to kill her and the children. :: j "He .was standing sideways on the lawn," she said, "when he made the last threat. I got the shotgun and two shells out of the cupboard w&lked to the porch and said, 'I'm sorry, but you won't get us. and then shot him." She said that she then dialed the operator, told what had hap--' pened and shortly thereafter police arrived. In the same statement Mrs. Keenan said the gun which had belonged to her former husband had been at the home of her stepfather, Von Taylor, who had it to go hunting. She brought the gun back to Provo and also bad a little .22 single shot for use if prowlers but I didnt intend to hurt, anyone," she said. Mrs, Kennan's attorney fought to have the confession not admit ted as evidence on grounds that it was not a verbatim transcript of interrogation and that while Mrs. Keenan bad been advised she could have an attorney and that statements made by her could be used against her that she was not immediately placed uncame,1 - der arrest nor taken immediately before a magistrate. His request was denied. Tito Arrives from Page One) which continue to develop sucess fully and grow stronger." He said Russia wants to extend economic, cultural, scientific, and other relations with Yugoslavia in the interests of all socialiist counties." Khrushchev said the two gov ernments hold "identical views" on many world problems. Tito jsaid in reply he was "confident' his visit would strengthen relations. "At the present time we have much in common between us," the Yugoslav leader said. Western observers regarded today's welcoming ceremony as an obvious attempt by Khrushchev to smooth over Tito's ouster by the late Premier Josef Stalin from the Cominform in 1948.:! (Continued ' D i N' Wednesday noon, Wasatch Sec ond .LDS Ward chapel, 1455 Emerson Ave. Mrs. Elise Durtschi Gertsch, 83, 808 h Genesee Ave., died Sunday Funeral Thursday, 12:30 p.m.; Twenty-sixt- h LOS Ward , Chapel, 9th West' and 7th South. Mrs. Winifred 3377 Plaza Way, 'died Sunday. Funeral Wednesday, 1 pjn., at 372 E. 1st S. Sirs. Elizabeth Ann Hoogland Edwards, 84, 137 E. Iit S., died Monday. Funeral Thursday noon at 260 E. South Temple. Albert Georare Hodges, 74, 1322 W. 5th S., died Sunday. OGDEN Ubyald Stacy Roth, son of Raymond A. and Rose Olsen Roth, Salt Lake City, formerly Ogden, died Funeral! Wednesday, Sunday. 11 a.m., Larkin Mortuary, Ogden. Mrs. Fern Wilde Campbell How- aid, 50, Ogden, died Sunday. Mrs. Blanche Gibson" Wilson, 78, Ogden, died Saturday; in an Ogden Funeral Wednesday, hospital. 1 p.m., Myers Mortuary, Ogden. Archie C. Kirkpatrick, 89, Ogden, died Sunday. Funeral Wednesday, 11 a.m., Aultorest Chapel of Flowers, Ogden. PRICE Leonard Logan Arnett, 76 325 N. 1st W., died Sunday. Owner Dies - ;(,v, ; , .: . Whittaker,. a geology student at UCLA, was from London. A Coast Guard hellcopteT, i an amphibious plane and several in a three-hoboats participated for search Wittaker, but no trace was found- i! Set Diving Record tBoth Keller and Niggli are from Switzerland. Keller, a professor of mathematics, holds the world dive. He record for an open-watset it in June of 1961 with a dive ot 1728 feet is Lake Maggiore, , Switzerland; his said He gas mixture cuts normal the depression time down to an estimated divers required by have His hours. experiments four Navy been financed by the U-and by private oil companies. . NEPHI John Chesley (Ches) Lowry, 46, died 5 a.m. Sunday at the ''Juab County Hospital following a heart attack. . " , f 1' v : ur er . n, Funeral Thursday, Masonic Temple. HELPER Mrs. . . . Ines Rerruto 54, 286 N. Main died SunHoly Rosary Tuesday 7:30 p.m., Mitchell Funeral Home, Price, Requiem Mass Wednesday, 10:30a.m., Helper St. Anthony Catholic Church. Gray, day. tery. ' from Page One) emphasize that the actions are aimed at improving combat readI iness." The congressional group most concerned with the plan, a House armed services subcommittee headed by F.a Edward Herbert, withdrew it opposition to the plan Monday. The chief features of the design for modernizing the Reserves and keying them more closely to the regular force's war plans were exactly as Defense Secretary Rob ert S: McNamara and the Army set forth last April. They called for scaling down tlie size of eight divisions four Guard and four Reserve and reorganizing them into highly trained brigades. They also de creed the elimination, of about 1,700 "obsolete and surplus" units of company size! or smaller and creation of about 1,000 new units adapted to modern Army needs. Thus there will be a net loss of about 700 units, which was vocally opposed for months. The National Guard divisions that the Pentagon wants "re aligned" into brigades are .the 34th of Nebraska and Iowa; 35th of Kansas and Missouri; 43rd of Con nectkut, Rhode Island ancL Ver mont; and 51st of Florida and South Carolina. The "realigned" Army Reserve divisions will be the 79th of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware; 96th of 94th of Massachusetts; Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Washington and. Nevada; and 103rd of Iowa, Wisconsin and Min nesota. ' Under the reorganization, six National Guard divisions will be designated as high priority units to be ready for deployment with the regular Army in about two Leadership In ' MOSCOW (UPI) Marshal Ser gei Biryuzov, commander in chief of Russian rocket forces, claimed today the Soviet Union leads the , United States in both antimissile defense and delivery of multi- megaton rockets. Writing in the army newspaper Red Star, Biryuzov said Russia's largest nuclear rockets "attain a tremendous yield of 50 or 60 or more megatons" while the biggest American warhead has a destruc tive potential of "only 5 million tons of TNT." Fog Envelopes (Continued from Page One) phia where the passengers were stranded for the night. The control tower at Philadel phia Airport reported that an ex tra 53 planes" were camped there for the night, most of them New York-boun- d flights that were diverted. In some instances, rail transportation also was affected. The Jersey Central Railroad was forced to suspend its ferry opera tion between Jersey City and low er Manhattan for five hours. The visibility was at its lowest in New York Harbor where a British freighter nd an oil tanker collided. There were no injuries and damage to both ships was slight. -- months.! ailment. He was born Vj a i j . Dar-Es-Salaa- m j Man Receives Prison Sentence In 'Murder Case 'I : DAUGHTER OF FORMER CHURCH PRESIDENT DIES ' LOGAN (UPI) A daughter of the late Lorenzo Snow, a former president of the LDS Church, died here Monday. Mrs. Maybelle Snow Cole was 83 She was the widow of Alfred Lj Cole, a lumber dealer in Logan. Services will be held Wednesday at Logan. J 1 ' V 250 J WBST CENTER World's Only Electronic Wrist Timepiece US SERVE YOU . 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ZMRIftalUWSMMn Gifts and Yarn C pmr FINANCE CORPORATION HOUSEHOLD Optical, Jewelry 124 W. CENTER i HOUSEHOLD FINANCE Heindselman' It LJ of ! , TAYLOR'S 1 thart only Choose from a complete selection of h Accutron Timepieces starting at $125.00 f DEPT. 53 i dint that Part of a balanat not on (hat fart of balanc in txumt of $30 1 to $600. PaymtnU on loans atom SOOO tnriuta mm add-o- n , INFANT UV pymm pm $10.07 $ $100 28.35 49.17 500 1000 ';' $43.33 51.66 93.33 2000 $75.55 86.66 103.33 186.66 2500 93.19 107.08 f 127.91 232.08 Hounkold'i chart it In monthly rmU of 3 on SJOO. and axe Pirn v -4 Tomorrow at at group rate MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 12 36 30 Pm ' Colors: Pink, Klue, Aqua, Maize STAFFED r . GUARANTEED An ET This season, add one more name) "Shopper's Loan," to the top of your jbig holiday shopping! list and money will no longer be a problem. You'll have plenty of cash to buy just the right gift for every . at any store you name on your; list please. Store bills won't come in at the end of the month either, blcauke you'll pay for everything on the spot, and then make small monthly payments to HFC. BULOVA ONLY! REPEAT OF LOAN U ACCUTRON by HFC SHOPPER'S AN on loans FLOWERS ARE ALWAYS -L- I ; ACCURACY! ; Ask about Credit Life insurance "C J SMALL PROBLEM WITH ! GUARANTEED j. !; , .. ,1 Gift ! - 31 0 "" - ; Sino-India- 3-66- No Telephone or Mail Orders. All Sales Final. No Sales to Other Stores j j William E. Smith, Spanish Fork, funsral services will bs held Friday at 1 p.m. In ths Spanish Fork 8th Ward. Friends may call at Our Chapsl of Memories, in Spanish Fork Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday prior to services. Interment will be in Salem City Cemetery. IE the State j m FR the son of 1885, By 85 East, 300 South (Continued from Page One) Federal Mediation and Concilia tion Service after President Ken board nedy appointed a three-ma- n of inquiry. The board called the temporary voluntary truce precarious and said the union security issue had not been settled. ! Dec. 23. Utah, Ritter Turns! Down Request William. H. and Harriet Eddins I Smith. He was a WeUme resi- Mr. Smith dent of the Cen tral Utah area, where he followed the occupation of farming and livestock raising. On July 22, 1912,-- he married Elodie Hopper at Salt Lake City. He was a member of the LDS church, and held the rank of elder. : Surviving him are his wife of Spanish Fork; two sons, Frank L. Smith Spanish Fork, and Elmo Smith, Payson; two daughters, Mrs. Alfred (Ruth) Jensen, Salt Lake: City, and Mrs. James (Vera) Logan, Pendleton, Ore.; 14 grandchildren and 15 greatgrandchildren.; Also surviving are two brothers, Jbhn Smith, and Sam Parkinson, both of Crescent, Utah. Funeral services will ' be held ' da?' Friday at 1 p.m. in the Spanish Fork 8th LDS Ward Chapel, with African nationalist leaders In Bishop Grant R. Lamb officiatLusaka, Northern Rhodesia, also criticized Ellender. They accused ing.. Friends may call at Our Chapel of Memories Mortuary in SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) A him of "fanning the embers of; Spanish Fork Thursday between old Salt Lake City man, racial hatred" with his reported: 7 and 9 p.m. or Friday prior to convicted last week of second de- statements. services. Burial will be In the gree, murder, was sentenced MonSalem City Cemetery. day to an indeterminate sentence in Utah State Prison. 1 William Whetton was found' guil Russia-Chin- a ty in the shooting death of Charles Patrick Alb ret son, 19, Salt Lake. The defense, attorney said he (Continued from Page One) life was fearful for the SERV I C E S ly of the Albanians: "We can no if sentenced to the prisoner'sHe is prison. longer call them Communists." in the Salt Lake French delegate Roland Leroy, now being held jail pending further legal Clyde Singleton funeral services secretary of the Central Commit County action. will be held Thursday at 2 p.ni. tee of the French Communist par at the Berg Drawing room ChapeL ty, also deplored the "fractionist friends may call Wednesday from action" of the Albanians, and the REPLACE BEARSKINS , 6 to 8 p.m. and Thursday prior ts Chinese attitude towards them. LONDON (UPI) The famous services. Interment will be In Prove ' " Kozlov, without mentioning the bearskin headgear of. the Buck City Cemetery. Chinese by name, said Monday ingham Palace guards will be rePauline Cappler Binder funeral that the theory that war is inevit- placed by forage caps on troops services will be held Wednesday Ot able was "an adventuristic posi- doing night-tim- e guard duty, a 10:30 a.m. in the Berg Drawing tion that has nothing to do with palace spokesman announced. room Chapel. Friends may ' call Marxism." Communism, he said, Li The reason: Forage caps "are Tuesday eve from 4 to I p.m. and is strong enough' to spread in the more comfortable for the sol Wednesday prior to services. Interment will be; In East Lawn Memorial world without playing with "ther- diers," according to the spokes Hills Cemetery. monuclear fire." J man. ; He heaped abuse on Peking's v Albanian friends and said the : n ', fighting could only U t help, "the imperialists and the reactionary circles of India." The Chinese listened impassively to Kozlov's criticism. The day before, they had ostentatiously failed to join in a standing ovation when Togliatti credited Khrushchev with averting a nuclear war over Cuba.- Out. Chapel or A MeraoRi'es Lockheed cent. at Cre s BERG MORTUARY Missile Field D-L- a., I In a car belonging to Ken Wright Sunday about 4 p. m.,i at 200 South State. The fire started from a flooded carburetor, firemen said, and DAR .Tanganyika damages were listed at $100. ( UPI Tanganyika today . became Gordon Wright was driving the the second African v nation ' to bar; car at the time of the mishap. Sen. Allen J. Ellender of Louisiana from its territory because of a statement considered derogatory to Africans. The Tanganyika; government; announced "that Ellender, 72, Would be asked to leave on his; scheduled arrival . here today. Uganda barred: the Democrat! Monday although it was not known" whether he had planned to visit that nwly independent na-- ; SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) An tion on his current tour of Africa.! attempt by the state of Utah to Ellender was reported to have' get a case by four prison inmates told newsmen in Southern Rhodismissed in federal court was desia last week that he had not 1 turned down Monday. seen any African nation where thej' The case was filed Oct. 8 and average African was capable of f involved inmates at Utah State eadership without white assist Prison who said they were subject ance.; to "cruel and inhuman punish A spokesman for the U.S.' Em-- ; ment." said the in Judge Willis W. Ritter gave the bassy would senator probably fly on to state 10 days to answer the charg- Nairobi without leaving his plane es formally. The letters came ''- ,in Tanganyika. from Leonard W. Bowne, Orlando Ellender, a member of the Sen- Morfin, Paul R. Sheffield and ate .Appropriations Committee, is Barde Beckstead. touring U.S.T embassies and mis-- : F sions in Africa. The Uganada government said S. L. Monday: "We do not want this prejudiced segregationst in Ugan 36-ye- ar Soviets Claim (Continued I p.m.,; Price 1 TOMORROW S. Appropriate OREM The Orem City Fire Department extinguished fa blaze 1 SPANISH FORK William Ed-dins Smith, 76 lifetime Central Utah resident, died Monday at his home, 80 N. 800 E., in this i ciry, oi a neari 1 I Seconcl Nation In Africa Bars Ellender . . I ; two-month-p- ld . 1800 Units G,-Winn- er, ! He was, born in Manti, Pee. 25, 1916, a son of Irvin and Margaret Thomas Lowry. He married Betty KeUer, July 1 1937 in Richfield. He was later divorced. He married Gyppe Carter, Feb. 8, 1956 at Las " Vegas, Nev. He operated a cafe in Nephi. He was a member of the LDS Church v Survivors include his widow, Nephi; one son Evan Lowry of Manti; his mother, Manti; one sister, Mrs. Margaret Nielson, Centerfield ; one brother, David Lowry- of Mount Pleasant; 11 grandchildren; step children, Jack Carter, Nephi; Tim Carter, Salt Lake City; Jim Carter, San Mateo, Calif.; jMrs. Patsy Iver-soFillmore; ilrs. Aim Coombs, Nephi.J : Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 1 p.m., in the Manti South Ward Chapel. Friends may JcaU Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.mjt, at" the Anderson Funeral Home In Nephi, and at the Manti chapel, one hour prior to services Thi ay. Military rites will be accorded by; the Manti American Legion Post. Burial in the Manti ceme - An official spokesman told In- ul Spanish Fork . ations' dian newsmen Monday night that Indian 'forces are standing fast in their airstrip stronghold of Chus-hand elsewhere in Ladakh; on the "western front" of the border war. Nehru told Parliament Monday the Communists appeared to be pulling some troops out of rear areas and thinning some forward positions but that they were keeping their forces on the front' lines. Orem Firemen Douse Blaze In Automobile William Eddins Smittt j , rest."., Utah Obituaries SALT LAKE Crry Eaoul James SpiBsbury, i 47, 1511 13th OEast, f died Sunday.;.', Funeral i 30 "K Y S E AOTVE STOCKS complete Vomm Close wn (Continued from Page One) the lawn at the same time threatgoing to ening, "111 go but a and kill home and gun get go you and the fourv kids."; At the time he m ade this threat, said Mr. Blair, Mr. Wilkinson, an esHospital capee of the Utah1.-StatSecurity Ward, was facing his former wife? Francise. .; Mr. Blair said he heard the report "of the gun, looked over his shoulder and saw Mrs. Keen an standing oh the porch about eight or 10 feet away. f , f A statement read to presiding Judge Terry was signed by Mrs. Keenan and described the shooting as follows: Mrs. Keena'n said, she bad lived with Mr. Wilkinson as common law wife following their divorce until she signed a commitment paper to Utalj,. State Hospital. Even after the commitment she said she had visited him at the hospital and attended therapy groups with him. But she said She ceased to see him 'after a court hearing in April I9S2 when it was decided he would: be regained at the hospital. Following' his escape she said he telephoned several times arid came to her Provo home Oct. 17 at 12 midnight remaining until 6 a.m. She said he used vu'lger taMc and wanted her to hide him. She said he returned on Oct. 18 and wanted "Dorothy and I to go for a drink," He had a companion with him. Mrs. Keenan said Mr. Wilkinson returned at 7 p.m. Oct. 19 when she was in the bedroom 'of the Provo home getting some things to go hunting. She said her husband telephoned and she told him "she had company." "Is it him?" her husband asked and she said, ,m Industrial Rails Utilities i Stocks 648.41 a 9 138 .53 125.6336 223.99 .59 .66 126.13 AS 226.86 6484172.26 189.1(1 .87 Cioe: Mowctay"s of Nw Member - J. A. BY John Chesley Lowry Woman Held 4, 1881 9.30 to 700 '. . , . PRECEDING,. CHRISTMAS |