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Show 4 SUNDAY HERALD 4 f gggyg "I i Vera MorSALT LAKE. CITY 1926 of Hollywood Ave., gan, 71, N. Jensen of Jack Mrs. mother of cancer Friday in a Provo, died of V Salt Lake Hospital. She was born in 1892, in Salt ; Lake City, a daughter of. John William and Julia Ann Stewart. She married Hal Morgan, retired .Salt Lake assistant chief of police. ' Educated in the Salt Lake City schools and the LDS Business College,' Mrs. Morgan graduated as I Groves' LDS Hospital. as public health nurse Lake City schools, the Health, and the City ; . Emergency Hospital. her are husband, Salt Surviving son three daughr and a Lake City; ters, John William Morgan, Mrs. Louise W. (Ruth) Michelson, both of Salt Lake-- City; Mrs. George A (Marion) Panaretos, Hillsborough, Calif., and Mrs. Jack N. (Betty) Jensen, Provo; 13 grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Ethel Selander Sacrementd, . Calif.; Mrs. Franker. Nelson, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Doris L. Towers, Oakland, Calif. Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at the'Larkin Mortuary, 260 E. South Temple, Salt Lake City, where friends may call this evening from 6 to 8 and Monday prior to the services. Interment will be in the Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park. Lizzie - ; Anderson, 45 ; department pro- Lockwood An Vernon vv:-- i geson White, 74, of! of a heart ailment Friday jn the ayson Hospital. She was born April 25, 1889, in Santaquin, a daughter of Andrew and Necoline Olsen Borgeson. She married Lucein E White March 21, 1919, in the Saltf Lake governments.! LDS Temple. administration source told Educated in the Sarftaquin the policy was "to use neksmen schools and at Utah State Agri-worleverage to obtain as rapid cultural College, Mrs. White complete: a return to consti- ed as a secretary in law off ces tutional and legitimate govern- &au Jaxe city. ine nad neejr a ment as we can." secretary at the LDS Hospital in saic juaxe tor zu years. A member of the LDS dhurch. she served a mission to the Eastern States in 1913-1Surviving are a Sdaughter. fvenita White, San Francisco; two grand two WASHINGTON children; a Secre (UPI) sisters and a brother, Mrfl. Ben Rusk Dean of State appeared (Emily) Bunker, Delta; Mrs; Owen tary to welcome the possibili Saturday fRhoda) Marley, Arimo, Ida., and ty of a showdown with Senate in Andrew a. Jorgeson, janiaiquin on his department s se - vestigators Funeral services will be con11 curity policies. auctea ruesaay at ij p.m..Itin me al Rusk responded promptly Santaquin LDS Stake Center. most eagerly to a "police reFriends may call at the Keith quest" from the Senate internal Jolley Mortuary ;in Paysoa Mon- security subcommittee to appear day evening from! 7 to 9 an4 at the soon to answer questions raised stake center in Santaquin Tuesday about departmental policies. prior to services!, mtermebt will A State Deartment spokesman be in the Santaquin City Cemetery. said that Rusk "has been hopeful for some time that this matter would be raised at the level it demands, namely his personal SALT LAKE CITY Roy Mellor appearance before the committee Hill, 74, Vf 64 Bryan Avd., died as the official responsible for the Friday; funeral Tuesday! noon, operation of the Department of 260 E. South Temple. Era Steven State, including its security proson Christensen, C2, of 83-- Sher gram, r k- fnd Rusk Seeks ! B Utah Obituaries man Ave., died Thursday; jfuneral Monday noon, Hawthorne LDS Ward Chapel. Claude Leslie Wat-wvesuiiiiHKSier me., son, to, ox died Thursday; funeral TUesday, 10 a.m., 260 E South Temple. Lamar Taylor, 46, of 1882 E. 3355 S.. died Thursday Lucy Oakley Ford, 88, of 1471 E., 4080 S., died Thursday; funeral Mon day, 2 p.m., 36 IE. 7)th S. Daniel Wilford McCleery, 69, of 306 Bennyview Ave., died Friday. LucreUa EUzabeth Flowers Barnes Malan, j1 73, of 613 30th St.. died Thursdiy; fun eral Monday, 11 a.m., Myers OGDEN Mortuary I' j Emma Peirce Geb- hardt Imlay, 74, of 565 E. 6400 S., died Thursday; funerlal Mon day noon, South: Cottonwood Sixth LDS Ward Chapel. FAMrNOTOfN i- - Elizabeth Wood Whitaker; 83, died; Thurs day: funeral M o n d a y. 1 p.m.. Farmdngton Third LDS Ward Chapel. MAGNA Stella (Stamata) Panapoulos Kanios, 84, of 3048 S. 8850 W., died ,hursday; funeral Holy Trinity Greek Monday Ortiiodox Church, MIDVALE Oust Landures, 91, S.L 962 7800 E. died Wednesday; of was funeral Saturday. MURRAY i , Church, she served as Relief Society president in the Oak Hills Third Ward in. Provo and had worked in the MIA and ward choirs in Provo, Orem and Salt Lake City. Surviving are her husband, Brazil; four sons and four daugh ters, Martha Joy, Julie Danielle, Colette. Vernon L Jr., David Alan, Susan Lee, Jonathan and Laurence Anderson, all of Bra zil; her, parents, Salt Lake City; four brothers, Alan Roberts, Den William Otto CEDAR CITY ver, Colo.; Brian Roberts, Salt Reeves, 69, died Thursday; fun Lake City; Lee Roberts, Los An eral Monday, 2 p.m., Cedar City geles, and Dean Roberts, Las Fourth LDS Ward Chapel. Vegas, Nev. BEAVER Dr. John R. MurFuneral services will be con dock, 67. died. Sunday; funera ducted Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. in was Saturday, the Oak Hills Third Ward Chapel, Louise BRIGIIAM C1TY4-Sara1600 N. 900 E., Provo, with Burton Young,) 8S, died Friday; Bishop Frank Haymore officiat funeral Monday, 11 a.mi, Harold ing. Friends may, call at the B. u jfelt Mortuary. white Chapel Morrunary, 124 S. TAYLOR, Weiber County Peter 4th: E., Salt Lake City, Monday 71, died Friday i funera Welsh, evening from 6 to 8 and at the Monday, 1 p.m., Lindquist and chapel in Provo one hour prior Sons SoriuaryJ to services Tuesday. Interment will be in the Wasatch Lawn: Me BAKED FLOUNDER i . i i - j ih f morial Park. BANANA SWIRL .You can bet children will love Banana Swirl. Prepare a package of chocolate pudding mix accord ing to package directions. Stir in cup toasted slivered almonds. Spoon into sherbet glasses after iwitih infant strained ban nately anas (use two 5 oz. jarskVchill When ready to serve, top with whipped cream and maraschino cherries. Makes four- to five serv - Arranged to Please I The V Discriminating BOUQUETS and CORSAGES Rohbock Sons Floral 1042 OREM t South State AC Irom (Continued Page One) Brazil Siege In Dispute if controversial request state of siege when congress reconvenes Monday.' Ranieri Mazzili, president of the chamber of deputies, adjourned Goulart's for a - 30-da- y A i i - 85 East, 300 South i m I: t FR 3-66- THE CONSOLATIDN OF OUR BEAUTIFUL SURROUNDINGS Our chape and grounds were designed to o fer the comfort and consolatl on that middle-of-the-roa- V j river-runni- j Vietnamese of the while rushed scene, whistle blowing police tried to newsmen and photographers keep away. New York Times correspondent David Halberstam and two NBC men, newsmen Don Sharkey and cameraman television Grant kicked and were beaten Wolfkill, by police who seized Wolfkill's camera. Sharkey, who w&s hit over the head with a chair, suf f ered a scalp wound that it took eight stitches to close. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge protested to the foreign of fice about the beating of the newsmen. Although the police succeeded in getting Wolfkill's camera, other photographers sped away in taxis, their pictures safe. No reason was given for the to self-immolati- Civil Rights j 33 High School Bands Highlight Half time Event o n I y. an atmosph ere. of beauty and peace can give in time of iorrow. I , i' J. 1 JFK Recalls ill-fat- ed Mr. Dean, described as injured and a little dileriousJ was. put on a train for home after being given medical treatment. Mr. Davis, after gathering more food, returned to the river and the explorers. Mr. Johannis told Mrs. Cross that he would fly over the expi- dition today and telephone her tonight on the condition of the explorers. Mr. Cross has been running the Colorado River for 15 years. Kis son, John L. Cross Jr., 21, is head guide and boa man, has conquered many of the white-watrivers in the west. All members of the party are described as expert! boatmen. i er I One cf the most spectacular ever to be seen in sights any stadium was the maneuvering of over 2,000 young musicians from 33 high school bands at balftime Saturday night at the BYUMontana game. The event was the climax to the annual Y Band Day at which the university is host to high school ba nds all over Utah. Saturday's events drew 32 bands from Salt Lake to Kanab and one from Montezuma High School in Cortez, Russia Already Has Chosen Its Moon Team operation with the government of President Ngo Dlnh Diem. The view of some military leaders has been that the! United States should concern itself! only with helping the South Vietnamese win the HAVANA (UPI) guerrilla war with Communist? soaceSoviet woman Valentina Tereshkova said and stay out of the domestic sit Thursday night Russia already uation. as chosen its team ,for a moon flight and is studying the orob- em 6f travel to other planets. She did not say how soon Rus sia expects to achieve these goals. In a television interview, Miss Tereshkova said the Russians hope soon to be able to effect' a SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) rendezvous between two space d Fourteen-year-olin orbit an essential pre ships Gregory Child was to in the abdon shot liminary interplanetary travel. Richmond in what i police She said the Soviet plan for en Friday night r a teena g was ispace travel envisions the launch- said probably a of manned spaceship, fol dispute. jing lowed into orbit by a rocket-pr- o The victim, son of Mr, and pelled fuel tank at which the Mrs. Dean Richmond, was listed manned ship could refuel before in poor condition this morning in heading into deep space. ij the Holy Cross Hospital. Miss Tereshkova said Russian Police said Richmond! and a experts believe this procedure is companion were walking! down a essential for travel to Salt Lake City street about 9 planets. She did not indicate Luken-bachwhether they- plan to use this p. m., when Richard Allen Mr. son of and Mrs. 15, technique also for an attempted Leonard Lukenbach, approached r moonshot. Officers a with iaid th pistol. She said the Russian moon been had Lukenbach firing boy team is headed by Maj. Yuri Ga .22 caliber pistol the the into ' garin, Russia's first man in or- air. As the boys met, pfficeri bit, and that she also is a.menf-ber- . said the youth shot Richmond. Hie Lukenbach boy toldl police he thought the gun was loaded with blanks. He was booked at the Salt Lake County Detention f Home for investigation.,! I I "5 ,! S.L Boy Shot In Abdomen ; j t M - -- -- Executing intricate manue-ver- s by means of diagrams fuxnialied them weeks ago by mail, the bands spelled out "Salute to Youth" and "Maurice Abravanel," the later honoring the eminent conductor of the Utah Stake Symphony. Maestro AbraVanel then led the massed bands in Crawford Gate's "The Wind Is A Lion," from "Promised Valley," and an excerpt from Tschaikovsky's Fifth Symphony. The 2,000 young musicians in the varied and brilliant colors of 33 different uniforms literally covered the entire football field. . Music Center Opens At American Fork AMERICAN FORK Metro Music Center, 77 Bast Main, cele- brated its grand opening ' other .joJ. Colo. this week. Owners and operators of the business are Jack Jeppson and Glade W. Berry. Mr. Jeppson is a native of American Fork, while Mr. Berry is a resident of Cedar Fort. Both men are well known throughout Utah Valley for their musical 7 ability. &'' ''k j' f . - v.,y.' Two Arrested in Robbery i LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two men, including a guard who previously claimed he was a "hos- t:i-- MEMBER OF PARTY Miss Janice Cross, jl9, daughter of the expedition leader, was re ported safe with other mem-- 1 bers of a river expedition in Mexico. What's Playina At The Movies tage," were arrested separately Saturday for the $80,000 robbery of a Torrance, Calif., area bank Sunday,! Oct. G one of the largest bank robberies " PROVO on record in, West Coast history. Lovers. and Wives Academy A third suspect was still being Paramount VTPs, E. Taylor, sought. j : About $25,000, in cash, as well R. Burton Uinta la Douce Irma uk as $45,000 unissued traveler's Pioneer Wives and Lovers checks and savings bonds, was '' .f i PAYSON recovered with the arrest of Ray R. Huish The Birds, Taylor mond Arthur Vigneau, 26, Lomi said. PU3ASANT authorities Grove la, Grove Gunfight' at the Corral Vigneau was arrested at a J roadblock at Buellton, about 23 AMERICAN FORK f miles north of Santa Barbara, Go Ooral The Three Stooges less than! 24 'hours after the hold Around the World in a Daze up' Friday of the Pacific State i t The journey was expected to last 10 days with che party, expec ted to emerge at the village of Urique Monday; after 130 miles on the river. However, Mrs. Crosk was told Saturday that the trip will probably take another 10 days. The journey Was made slower than expected by twjo waterfalls, sandbars, and bouid ers in the river. The trip was made for two reasons: first to c o n q u e r the river; and second to bring out archeological, geological and- historical data on the land and the Tarahumar Indians who inhabit the area and have become known as remarkable runners. Members of the expedition alo include: Janice Cross, 13, Orem; Vera Therber Orem r Dr. Wilmer Tanner, Provo, zoology professor jat BYU; Mary Ellen O'Reilly, Blak j - 1 j . 1 i - Bank. ' . Apprehended here was Jorge Velasco, 26, a janitor at the bank who ,said after the holdup that he was forced to help the hallo- ween masked bandits. v Eddy, Pa.; Al W. Morton, Salt Lake City; Ward J. Roylance, Salt Lake City; Leroy M. Ses sions, Salt (Lake City; G. E. Barton, La Canada, Calif.; E. A. Moore, Burtoank, Calif.; and Dr. Fred Bishofif, Sail Lake City. CARD OF THANKS With deepest gratitude! and. appreciation we desire tolacknowl--. edge the assistance and expressions of sympathy of our many friends and relatives diring our recensorrowL We take this meang to thank all! those who assisted' at the services, sent, floral tri butes, sgave expressions of con. dolenc or in any t)thef way sisted. , The Family of Fitehugh Lee Bott Savoi. Szi-Sz- si ' considers herself absolutely un- dressed without her diamond wrist 20-year-- Watch. j Pauline Resphigi takes hers off when she does the dishes. to housewife Zale's High life a has diamond design watch for every '. : woman. So even though Pauline does her own dishes, her husband was smart, enough to understand how very much that one touch of luxury would mean Pleasant Grove erv-?c- 1tt-4t- h rg Harold Hartley funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a.m. in the Orem Mortuary. Friends may call Sunday from 7 to 9 at the mortuary in Orem and Mon-- I day prior to services. Interment will be in Provo City Cemetery. Perfect tribute , i to a'memoru X M dearly cherished i i BERG MORTUARY S ElVICtl to her. .q. Since Zale's prices range from a mere $29.95 to a magnificent $995.00,. you can easily see that somewhere in the Zale collection there's a diamond watch ideally suited for your next anniversary, birthday or Christ- mas giving, You can easily buy it too, on Zale's convenient credit terms. mr77 7 S n West Center Provo Open Monrtayg TCtC. Til Twelve radian! diamonds high-liitHIM us1" iiniKum case of lady'fc 17-jewel Elgtn. ,u ki "$$9 ft ": Phone FR 3 - 4 ISO 9 njn. . 1- I I f , Illustration nlorgtd to how dmtail ; e Elvernon Fwguton funeral will be held Monday et 1 p.m. Ward in the Edgemont the call at Frlendi may Chapel. Mortuary at Pleas-an- t Grove Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Monday at the Edgemont; Church from 11 until time of services. Interment will be in the Provo City Cemetery. !; " ng 10 GIs Thousands i . I d . Vi- j River Expedition Reported In Good Condition in Mexico , :i- - four-plac- e and left wing opponents! in con ' gress. Some political observers said Goulart's Labo rites will vote in favor of "the declaration and the conservative National democratic Union will vote against it, They raid the outcome will depend on (Continued from Page One) Social the Democrats, largest party in the started to run low on food. Ac chamber. cording to Mr. Johannis' report, Mr. Davis and Mr. Dean missed the cache. They then tried to walk out of the river canyon, which was described as being (Continued from Page One) 2 times as deep as the Grand Canyon. After wandering about Reporters summoned to the they were rescued by the Tara- scene by anonymous telephone humar Indians. monk calls saw the shaven-heade- d set fire to his yellow robe, which apparently had been soaked with gasoline. He sat Ion the pavement surrounding a traffic circle in the center of the square. oft-battere- d rg :::..',. . - IN TROUBLE ON RIVER ? John L. Cross Sr., 45, right, and John L. Cross Jr., 21, both of 860 S. 1000 E., expedition, on the Rio Orem, leaders of a Madre Mountains of Mexico Sierra Urique, a river in the 12 other members of the have been reported lost with of the member party who stumbled expedition by a rest stemming from soaring inflaback to civilization Saturday. However, according to tion, Mrs. Cross Saturday night, the party is not lost and is Top military leaders were said in favor of the state of siege but working its way down the river toward its predeit faced stiff opposition from right termined stopping points. , j - Olpin-Sundbe- 1 Motorcyclist Hurt Slightly in , p With Dbg Mishap : : the body Friday night, ostensibly due to local elections scheduled Sunday in many cities. Tancredo Neves, leader of the in the government delegation chamber, said Goulart is counting on the votes of; some deputies who will be flown to Brasilia from their home districts in time to vote Monday. Goulart asked congress for the state of siege i limited form of martial Law to permit his government to deal more freely with a wave of strikes and political un- Hurricane Olpin-Sonjdbe- .: i. ... " 4-- 6. Ocm Chattel oC A MenioTiies J- - i : : LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) A coroner's jury has ruled that the Lee Iarr, 27, of 430 S. death of a California man who 600Allan W., Provo, suffered minor blew up his plane flying over at 3:15 p.ni. injuries Saturday Las Vegas last month was a sui at 433 S. 100 W. when his motorcide. as he cycle flipped swerved to Code Sterett, 28, a heavy equip avoid a smafl hitting dog. ment operator j from Paradise, .Ir. was Darr headed nortii on was killed in the wreckage OaHf., West when First the small dog of the rented Piper owned by Mrs Penny Salter of" Cherokee. The jury returned its veridct 67 W. 400 S., rant into, the street,-I- n trying to avoid the dog, Mr, . late Friday after hearing tes Darr timony of police and Mrs. Arlene and flipped on the motorcycle received abrasions and laceSterett, the victim's widow who said she heard the plane explode rates on his right leg and arm. while she was at work nearlbv in The dog was hurt so badly, in the the cashier's cage of a downtown mishap that it was destroyed casino. Wreckage fell in a deso-- r witm the owner's permission. late area near the railroad yards. Mrs. Sterett testified she and her three children bad taken a ride in the plane earlier (Continued from Page One) in the day She said she had come here from Paradise, a small Sac ramento Valley community, to get military leaders. Lodge has! been a divorce The plane ride was an represented as feeling that the and the conduct of attempt to reconcile their marital political crisis war are guerrilla closely related. difficulties. The Saigon reports have j indicated that the CIA favored j co- . but Buddhist's there was little doubt it was ported that the patrol truck in meant to protest alleged discrim which he was riding was being ination against members of his ambushed while stopped in the Li- faith by the government of Presi dice area. Lidice is a low income dent Ngo Dinhl Diem, who is a apartment liouse development in Roman Catholic. the western section of the city. Suddenly, sthe frantic cries for help stoppedjl and all that could be Heard overj me raaio was me (Continued from Page One) chatter of machine, gun fire. Fifteen minutes! later, when reHavana Radio warned residents inforcement! arrived, another solof Camaguey Province to take all had Castillo that dier reported precautions against the furious "been killed fin the- ambush. blow. Almost simultaneously, reports A broadcast monitored in Mi began to come in to police head- ami warned Cubans living quarters from a dozen places in in the center of the island that the city, where terrorists in Flora was "very dangerous." speeding cats fired machine guns The Britain's string Bahamas, into crowds' or at army or police of some 700 islands' stretching sentries. off Florida's East southeastward At one political meeting of the Coast, began battening down for President the storm Accion Democratica, Friday night. Romulo Betancourt's party, four of the And residents persons were wounded by ma- South Florida Keys, smashed chine gun fire at the workers three years ago by hurricane of El suburban development Donna, waited nervously for late Valle. word on the hurricane's move ments. The increasing threat posed by Flora forced cancellation of planned weekend visit by Emper (Continued from Page One) or Haile Selassie of Ethiopia to the nation's missile test center a Brown and Tanner said they endorsing a Cape Canaveral. would "consider" State officials said the visi civil rights statement. would have involved a flight from The meeting between Fritz and New York to this space port, and the churchf leaders was the first the been ruled out by had trip ever held. The Church previously Flora. tvad cancelled a scheduled meet Military and civilian agencies with the NAACP one hour before at the cape were preparing, to it was duef to begin. down'! the large rockets "button Ted Cannon, Church Informaand giant launching facilities in tion Secretary, said the Church event the threat continues to the had no comment at this time. grow. The Civil Rights supporters were spurred this week by an Here's a quick and easy dressarticle in Look Magazine by an ing for steamed cabbage: Mix a LOS Church member and butter University of Utah student, dash of mild mustard with over lemon vegePour and juice. Jeff Nye. He called upon the ,s table. Mormon leaders to tihe doctrine which prevents Negroes from holding the priest Orem -- . Brazilian BRASILIA (UPI) congressmen prepared Saturday to resume debate on j President Joao r Fatal Plane Crash, Sui ill 111 re-exam-ine -- FLOWERS Pro-Ctistroi- tes This recipe N for a delicious supper dish. First, preheat the oven, to 500 jdegfees. Arrange frozen fillet ot flounder in single layer in a snallow baking dish. Blond a jean' of condensed cream of celery soup with cup hood. .' mine, season witn salt and pepper and pour over the fish." Bake about 20 minutes. Then sprinkle Olpin-Sundbe- rg a can of French! fried onions over the top. Return tof the oven ior 5 minutes. Serves Mortuary ings. FRESH - the-Domini- can Lizzie O Ber Santaquiri died SANTAQUIN mmm College. An active member of the LDS , . great-grandchil- d; derson. M r A. Anderson had ::&- ,tsr t gone with her husband and family to Brazil where Mr. An derson has a Mrs. Anderson special assign ment with the United States In formation Agency while on leave from BYU. but because of her illness returned to her parents home in Salt Lake a short time ego. Mr. Anderson accompanied his, wife to Salt Lake but will soon return to Brazil to complete his assignment there. She was born Aug. 9, 1918, in Stockport. England, a daughter of Walter and Florence P. Os borne Roberts. She married Ver non Lockwood Anderson June 12, 1942, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mrs. Anderson attended Brig- ham Young University and grad uated from the LDS Business v.- - 0. White Showdown Joyce Roberts Anderson, 45, formerly of Provo, died of cancer Friday night at the home of her parents in Salt Lake City. The wife of a BYTJ languages WlL The policy was given final ap proval in White House meetings Friday. Later, a policy statement was issued by Secretary of State Dean Rusk,' from New York, through the State Department here. Under existing conditions in Republic and Hon "there is no Rusk said, duras," collabor effective for opportunity ation by the United States under the Alliance for Progress or for normalization (of diplomatic rela tions, "Accordingly," the statement said, "we have stopped all econ omic and military aid to these countries, and I have commenced orderly reassignment of. the per sonnel involved," Missions Remain Diplomatic imissions will remain in both couhtres, though they will deal only "informally" with the 5. Cancer Fatal To Former Provo Citizen fessor, -- Santaquin Woman Dies at 74 I R. ' - Dr. W. H. She served In the Salt Board of Joyce The (UPI) Kennedy administration settled, to day on a policy of using economic and political "leverage" in dealing with new miliary regimes in V Latin America. econ- U. S. It announced that missions aid omc and military were being withdrawn gradually from the Dominican Republic and Honduras, where military coups have toppled elected governments in the past two weeks. WASHINGTON Services were held jthis week In Smithfieki, Cache SOounty, for Veda Chambers Smith,' 73, mother of Mrs. Reid E. Bajakhead of Pro vo. Mrs. Smith dlML last Sdriday A in Logan. She was a lifelong resident of Smithfield ..Surviving beide4 Mr. uamcaeaoYfare another daughter and- a 'son, Mrs K. J. Holds- worth, Salt Lake City, and Lewis C. Smith Newton Cache Cdunty. from 1912 (Continued from Page One) Logan Provpaiv Dies ! Honduras Vera Morgan, Veda Chambers Smith ProvoanV Mother T Mother of Succumbs in a registered nurse in v ' - ' 1 L |