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Show 10 Monday, April 14, 194? DAILY HERALD Rovan, YooIf Head tlew Stakes Continued from page one) stake. Stake clerks will be named at a later date, it was announced, also additional high council members mem-bers and counselors in the high priest quorum presidency- The proposal to divide the stake was sustained without a dissenting vote by the largest stake .conference congregation in the stake's history, a capacity audience of nearly 2,000 at the morning session. It was necessary to bring out chairs to take care of the overflow crowd which jammed the historic Provo tabernacle. taber-nacle. Early reorganization of the Fifth. Seventh, Eighth, Ninth wards was indicated when three bishops and one counselor were named to stake positions in the organization of the two stakes They were Bishop Robertson of the Eighth ward, named first counselor in the East Provo stake presidency, Bishop Ariel Ballifj Sharon, Orem Stakes Formed (Continued from page one) to be teamed later. Presidents of the 295th quorum of seventy are Carl A. Crawford, LeRoy G. Nicholes, E. Harold Holdaway, Glen E. Rowley, and Joseph E. Batemarr. The elders quorums will be retained as. at present in the various wards. In the Sharon stake. High Coun-cilmen Coun-cilmen Carlos D. Miller. Leaman B. Bennett, Weldon J. Taylor, C. Rodney Kimball and Raymond E. Hanks were retained, and Robert J. Olsen and Clyde M. Lunceford were sustained as new, members, with others to be chosen later Patriarch Bryant Heber Jolley Jr. was retained. August J. John son and Charles H. Poulson were retained as president and counselor coun-selor of the high priests quorum. Presidents of the 123rd quorum of seventy are Lawrence M. Pal mer, Herman S. Richards, J. wil ford Muhlestein, N. Floyd John rr Hifharrt C Riffelow. and of the Ninth ward, named to the F Mnrn ail retained. Eld- high council of the same stake; s quorum presidencies also Bishop Wesley P. Lloyd of the Seventh ward, and Mr. Woolsey, second counselor of the Fifth ward bishopric, who were named were retained. Lawrence M. Palmer Pal-mer was retained as stake mission president Horses Killed, Riders Injured In Head-On Crash SALT LAKE CITY, April 14 (U.R) Two horses were killed instantly in-stantly and their two riders injured in-jured when they collided head-on head-on in a freak accident here yesterday yes-terday afternoon. -. The accident occurred while two Salt Lake City youths were simulating cavalry maneuvers. They were riding toward each other at high speed when the horses collided, breaking the necks of both mounts. Only one of the riders Noble Clark, 16, was hospitalized. He suffered a dislocated shoulder. His riding companion Arthur Paul Vanderlinden, 15, suffered only minor injuries. O'Bryant Honored By Palmyra Stake SPANISH FORK W. J. O'Bryant, O'Bry-ant, formerly president of Palmyra Pal-myra LOS stake was honored at a farewell testimonial and reunion re-union of the stake at the high school auditorium. McKay Dr.V.M; State Health Commissioner, Dies SALT LAKE CITY, April 14 (U.PJ- Dr. William M. McKay, 58- year-old Utah health commissioner, commis-sioner, died last night in LDS hospital at Salt Lake City of complications following a heart attack. McKay was the brother of David O. McKay, second counsellor counsel-lor of the first presidency of the Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) church. McKay was the second high-ranking high-ranking Utah official to die within with-in a week of the same ailment. Secretary of State E. E. Monson died last Tuesday. McKay was widely known throughout the west for his work in public health. He had been commissioner of public health since 1939, and two years prior to tha.t had worked in the public health department. Born in Huntsville, Utah, McKay Mc-Kay was educated in the Ogden public schools and attended the 'fTniifAnitv rtf f hlra rrn Mm r Stake President J Angusjcdved his medlcal degree from Chnstensen who takes the place ,.n in of Mr. O Bryant presided at the ig24 d returned 'to utah to ceremony and the guests were ,, miin All stake auxiliary officers were i welcomed by LeGrande F. Smith, McKay was a physician in Weber county from 1927 until the r ... - . i .... , L 11 1 ITT ii nt.il. " " . w. ... pointments are made. Twenty- tation ot a set oicnurcn nisiory u health department. He one missionaries are in tne iieia "u wivt, w.m .. rrm cHurnr. air mH io from first stake president. Henry A. to tne irovo itaxe nign council, i , . . ,,-,, ut ,- new counselor of the stake. Hieh The division of the Provo and " iiihti the nro,am the oresen I requesieu io sei c umu new a , " , . V . L. , Sharon stakes which took place Sunday is part of a church program pro-gram to keep stake and ward units smaller in oraer to proviae xori 9nnnunr.ri. Gardner, making the presenta more individual activity church members, according to Elder Widstoe. Retiring stake officers who spoke at the Sunday afternoon session were Dr. P. M. Kelly and Walter P. Whitehead, of the high council; Clark Allred, high priest quorum president: Fred G. War-nick, War-nick, stake clerk; D. Spencer Grow, YMMIA president; Mrs. Inez Allred, Relief society president; presi-dent; Julia A. Caine, YWMIA president; Harold Lee, Sunday school superintendent; Grace Cheever, Girls' organization; Stan ley Gunn. home mission president; lion. Air. u eryant maae a speecn . . . ublic health deDart- J. Clayton Watts, who has of acceptance. The large crowd , JJKP" studied at Columbia served two years as Weber county physician. Prior to assuming his position served as first counselor to Stake President Taylor the past 15 months, was released to permit him to further purine pur-ine his graduate work in seminary sem-inary work. Mr. Holdaway. the new Orem; finished the evening with dancing. university, concentrating on pub- o i his familyleft Saturday morning uuring tne aiternoon irom lic heaith methods p.m. until 6 o clock more than McKay was married in 1913 to 800 children were entertained byiMarilda Allen. And is survived the stake Sunday Schoqj and Pri-, by ni widow and six children mary Doara. iney were ireaieu w onc son and fjVe daughters refreshments. Mr. O'Bryant and d--; T,vl,. :iur men new iiuiiic ui Mr. Faulkner was a member of Idaho- wh"e h kc" vr has served as Timpanogos ward bishop the past two years. Mr. Bunker, the new first coun Idaho Sugar company there. Banking Future Up To the Public FRENCH LICK, Ind., April 14 (U.R) Joseph M. Dodge, vice president pres-ident of the American Bankers Primary presidency and Andrew , Sharon stake, has served on thei a J- i.7' v.,.?!.;.,, ..n,i i association, said today that the Jensen, stake presidency. high counci, and Mr. Hunt hasj" ntTgaiion into the"" industry in America ah newiy susiaiuca been second counselor to Bisnop death of Sanford Cheney, who IDAHO MAN KILLED ON HIGHWAY " ...w SP10r io t-resiaeni layior in; nmcr ij, in.;i u . also spoke, as did Elder Widtsoe and Thomas E. McKay, assistant to the council of the twelve. Those who spoke at the Sunday mdtning session were Patriarch Amos N. Merrill, Thomas A. LeGrand ward. President all sessions Jarman of Windsor Taylor presided at of the conference was killed late Saturday night when struck by a car on highway 3n ceven miles west nf Boise. Chfnpv who lives nrar rinv. i the public Thirteen hundred members at- erdale school, was struck by a j widespread, and so close, mat tended the morning session, with car driven by Claude Murray, I what banks do or do not do easily ii- i i : i :n i ! o T3 : tf m ! hiivimM a nrkliflfo! iiie " HnH am would continue as a system of pri vate enterprise only if the public gives its consent "The relationship of banking to is so important, so Broadbent, retiring high council 'the lounge and corridor filled in! route 2, Boise, sheriff's deputies j becomes a political issue," Dodge ? . a tia. t t . 0 . i . . t ;j man who is moving to Salt Lake City; Willard Hawkins. Grace Cheever who reported on the mothers' apd daughters meeting; Wilbur Sowards and K. E. Weight addition to the auditorium. An estimated 200 additional persons were turned away for lack of space. This attendance was 18 per cent of the combined stake said. i said. Speakers at the morning priest-1 noDulation of aom-oximatelv 7000 hood session were Ronald Boulter, i The visiting authorities and all representing the priests' quorum;, newly-appointed stake presidency presiden-cy Nello Westover, stake Mel-!cies and high councilmen spoke. rhi7eHelr nriesthnnri rnmmittw cm j o . .1 w..,.An c ! f,. ..... ..r':.. ,'.11' ; Coal uioduction in the nations: than on a normal Saturday. o coal pits will climb "pidlylSam Caddy president of UMW Coal Production Expected To Climb Rapidly This Week PITTSBURGH, April 14 (U.R) Iduction there was better today sion proposal for a vote of the;aDlc circumstances.' priesthood membership. The combined ward choirs of the stake presented the vocal music at the conference sessions, j with the ward choristers taking turns in directing the chorus, with j Mr. Perry in charge of arrange-j ments. President Rowan has served as Elder Petersen admonished all to live clean, virtuous lives, adhering to church standards. He commented on the fine spirit of brotherhood existing in the two stakes. Morgan, high council and Elder grateful and acknowledge theitnJs e- . . .. . t. J"is fw"? 9?, nnn IS, Widtsoe who presented the divi-'hand of the Lord in their favor- In tne wake of d,sclosurc that-all the UMW s 22,000 members in .... , .... - ...i- - .1. '1U V1 1,1 Ulclr "U1 TTnifeH Minn Wnrlrero Procirlont ' his riistrirt will return to work I John L. Lewis has relaxed his I Monday. He said operators in his ; "safety strike." a survey of bitu- area had "cooperated very nice jminous fields showed that the ly" in improved safety conditions. 1 vast majority of the pits will be Most of the state's mines have at full production within two or been idle since the UMW ordered 'three days. a "memorial'' period April 1 to I In western Pennsylvania, pro- mourn the deaths of 111 miners duction todav was 49.6 Der cent at Centralia. 111. The combined Aaronic priest- of normal and it was expected to At Terre Haute. Ind.. Louis president of the stake since 1939: nood chorus furnished music for!Soar Monday. U. S. Steel Corp. Austin, president of UMW District when it was formed out of the old : tne morr),nK general session and;disclosed eight of its captivelll. said he believed all of In-Tltah In-Tltah stake He has heen a resi. tne priesthood session during the; mines in the state already were diana's mines would be back in dent nf Pmvn sinre 1Q3R A , afternoon. Ray E. Hanks and i open and four more were sched-' operation next week. He said the native nt Harfieid m,,ntv h ! William M.' Vernorf were in uled to ODen Mondav. The Lewis' federal inspectors were "about served as president of the Gar-!cnarge ot tnis Kroup of over 100 action probably will clear the, finished" with a reinspection of field stake over 10 yesrs. presi-; volces- Koralrt Hatch was accom-Way for production at other steer the mines in the western Indiana dent of the Texas LDS mission panist and Carrol Beagley, di-'COnipany captive mines. coal ficld.. 4'a years and served two terms recior- A quanei irom vineyaia; The big steel company an- "The Indiana mines are prac- as reoresentative from Garfield san8 at tne priesthood session, , nounced that it will restore full tically all in operation now, countv in the state lee islattire ! where Conrad Harward, a priest.; blast furnace production tomor- Austin said. "The way it looks President Valentine is assistant BlsnP Arcn Pulham and Bishop row. xhe equivalent of eight now. all of the mines will be back professor of Spanish at the BYU c- Wilford Larsen were speakers, furnaces had been banked by the; to work by next week." Yester- and was a missionary to Argen- Eva G- Gillespie, chairman of iack Cf coal and coke in the day's production in Indiana mines tina from 1935 to 1938. He has IrDS g,rls organization conducted pittsburgh-Youngstown districts.! was estimated at 74 per cent of been a member of the high coun- yne ,n,cls ana aaugniers raeei-, four thousand coke oven, blast normal. cil .for many years, acting as'inR at Tiropanog0 ward, furnace and river barge workers' chairman of the stake Aaronic """i"3 ",, sa"5;idled by the cutback, were being priesthood committee. Prior to lw?u"?l"'4.and M,ses uth 8 nd recalled. that time he worked as a Sundav , ,l" lMicV "V1 school teacher in the Manavu!ar of Ple.afa,lt Vlew wa,d; 7he"-ward 7he"-ward i accompanists were LaPreal Jones President Jackson is a native of and. 0,a Allred-Fountain Allred-Fountain Green and filled a mis-' Standard group awards were sion to the eastern states. He.Presen1. Vineyard Pleasant labored in the First ward Sundav YwCW- Wlndj;or: ke AV,e,W .f nd school and MIA on his return. -Sharon wards by Mrs. Anita Var-After Var-After his marriage to Rilla Jacob- .v of the stake LDS girls or- sen they made their home in the . " Steel production at Carnegie Car-negie - Illinois' Youngstown works, which had been cut 700 tons a day, will be restored re-stored by the increase of pig-iron pig-iron from the blast furnaces. In Illinois, Jack Rippon, vice president of UMW District Dist-rict 12 said he expected that "all UMW mines in Illinois probably will be working in four or five days." Fifth ward where he served as; Mrs. Bessie E. Gourlev Solid Fuels administration at Fairnibnt. W. Va.. said all but two of the 272 mines in UMW District While most lenders throughout 31 would operate Monday. Wil-thc Wil-thc nation said they had not re- Ham Blizzard, District 17 presi- wasjCeived Lewis' UMW message thatjdent atfCharleston, W. Va., said he "believed by district expected production to reacn u wi . . . . , . . . Euesi SDEKer hiici sne nisn avpn ,u ..." up.J works of art in needlework: knit- presidents to be safe could be re-1 per cent of normal in the 200 r .c iwu K . tinB a,.d work of her nio. opened. they said they expected mines in his district. The south peen ara leacning supeivisor. oncln itK their members to follow instruc-'ern West Virainia Drosoects were ne is a memoer 01 me iviwanis' ... . . a 4- ! n,n ut m hiUvH northern West Virginia pro-; operations would hit 50 per cent we is a member of the Kiwanis . . , . ' " . . , , stories relating to them. A pum-!n club and business manager of the . . , . , r-io-t, 'ber of water color pictures were; ln President Woolf has served aslal di"f.,ayd 'duction already has risen 8,000 Mrs. Myrtle Christensen offer-1 tons above the normal 200,000 tons a day. Tennessee State Labor Commls- Roan in the stake presidency for!ed cl! ng "nd gave the . , . 1 , poem Amethyst. t Zmw . i The sophomore girls sextet of sioner W. E. Jacobs said he ex-rmfn.V ex-rmfn.V and ,Terinten2n! Lioln high school furnOhed pected -all the state s mines to S'the "take Monday and ,hat he had ?s a Ltive of Cache countv hi! sion- with Miss Maxine Varley as .been informed that "the district ancestors be?ng pioneers o 87 accomPa" unio" "preaentative has told the He iac nretiHon nt ka ru ' miners to go back to work. Yn tVL io9Q X fo- The same calendar is used south' The Alabama state mining h. Mme t PrA.n in ton ar,,i of the equator that we use. butl institute reported that less than .11.-. IID V l of normal Monday. served as principal of the BY;. i. : v. 1 , r 1 winier. iiiKii kiiuui lur Severn jeais in recent years he has been profes- . sor of secondary education at the ? BYU. 1 .President Robertson has lived in Provo since 1940, coming here from Springville where he was bishop of the Fourth ward and later a counselor in the Kolob stake presidency. He was president presi-dent of the Japanese mission at the time it was closed in 1924. Thirteen years later when he was a county commissioner, he resigned re-signed whCn he was called to open the Japanese mission in Hawaii Ha-waii and spent three years in charge of the work in the islands. He has been bishop of the Eighth ward since it was oranized out of the Fifth ward six years ago. President Perry who was re cently named superintendent of ouiiaings ana grounds at me uiu came to Provo in 1936 from Cedar City where he was born. He has been a member of the stake high council for thfc last two years and has also served as stake music director. He was bishop of the Cedar City Second ward and filled fill-ed a mission to Mexico with Mrs. Perry in 1925-27. He was city manager of Cedar City and worked work-ed as an engineer for the FWA and other government agencies. summer during our five per cent of the states mines would be closed Monday. Pro- iMiffjmrmis 'f you're UERVQUS Oa'CEITAMBAYrefMaetft! If functional monthly dUturbaneta cause you to anffer nerroua tension t uch time tola treat meUlcin la mmou to relieve auca symptoms OBUUWmiTSrX (Adv o FOE 1 7H&$! - FOR HER fAelchn nit r htc MAleft ..bah 9 ft. . . -M . . Hon'kle SOW yd fitted--t0m ,out o r or Dark Brown . Ton or " Smart travel today is the Samsonite way. Streamlite styled to new beauty, built to new utility and value, the nationally advertised ad-vertised Samsonite makes you an extra comfortable traveler. 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