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Show Man Dies At Age 78 Stanley B. Harris, 78, of 980 W. 1600 N, died recently at the Utah Valley Hospital following fol-lowing an illness. He was born July 3, 1894 in Lindon, a son of Edward Alfred and Polly Walker Harris. He married Rosella Jane Wadley on March 16, 1921 In the Salt Lake Temple. She died Feb. 17, 1948. He married Fern Edwards on Dec. 17 1948 in the Sale Lake Temple. He had worked as a farmer all of is life. Active in the LDS Church, he lived in the Orem 34rh Ward at the time of his death. For 12 years he was bishop of the Windsor Ward, he filled a mission to the Central States from 1917 to 1919 and was a stake high councilman in Sharon Stake. ; . ' i ; ' ' ' V It:, L Mr. Harris Active in civic affairs, Mr. Harris served onthe Orem Town Board, on the North Union Irrigation Ir-rigation Co. Board of Directors, Direct-ors, and was secretary for 20 years, still serving at the time of his death. He was a well-known funeral speaker. Survivors include his widow, Orem; two sons and one daughter Wilford W. Harris, Orem; Ray Harris, Murray; Mrs. Fred (Shirley) Atwood,PleasantGrove two stepchildren, Max V, Edwards, Ed-wards, Portland, Ore.; Maureen Hansen, Long Beach, Calif.; 15 grandchildren seven greatgrandchildren; great-grandchildren; two brothers and two sisters, Ralph Harris, Pleasant Grovej Lester Harris, Midvale; Mrs. George (Leah; Miller, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Leonard (Inez) Miller, Mesa Ariz. Funeral services were Saturday Sat-urday at 1 p.m. in the Orem 34th Ward Chapel. Burial was in the Pleasant Grove Cemetery. Orem Man's Mother Dies Services were held Tuesday for Rosalie Thorn Ingalsbe Tanner, Tan-ner, 89, who died Saturday at her home after a long llness. She was the mother of Glen A. Tanner of Orem. T' Has Large Film Service Hundreds of educational motion picture films are distributed daily from one of the largest film libraries in the inter mountain moun-tain states located in a temperature-controlled vault on theBYU campus. Stored in the basement of the Herald R. Clark buidling on the BYU campus are over 7300 films (over 400 titles ) dealing primarily pri-marily with educational and religious re-ligious topics. Our operation is intended mainly to serve the campus," said Dee Lister, circulation man ager of the educational media services, which handles the film library. "We have a great number num-ber of films which may be used for supplementing class work. Whether the situation involves preschool children or students in college, our library is able to fit almost any need. Fitting the needs of the 25,000 studentbody is a full-time job for the educational media services. During the school year the film library processes between 300 and 400 films each day. In addition to the many classes on campus which utilize the facilities, fa-cilities, outside grups such as churches and schools also rent films regularly from the University. Univer-sity. Mr. Lister said the demand for the religious films is so heavy that his department often has difficulty supplying the films to all those who request them. Customers within 100 miles of BYU are supplied by a weekly delivery service. Other orders are handled through the mail. Schools and religious groups may obtain films by placing orders with educational media services at BYU, 290 HRCB or by phoning BYU ext. 2713. Rental Ren-tal fees are charged according to the film and equipment used. Meetinghouse libraries of the LDS Church all over the country have lists of the religious films Infant Dies In Hospital Stacy Lnn Pulham (2 days) died in the University' Medical Center Hospital October L She was born September 29, 1972 to Clive Leroy and Christine Kill-pack Kill-pack Pulham, former residents of Orem. The child is survived by parents par-ents of 806 West 3600 South, Bountiful, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Killpack, and Mr. and Mrs. Clive F. Pulham, Pul-ham, all of Orem. Graveside services were held Wednesday in the Orem City Cemetery. Burial in the Orem City cemetery. W i Navy Airman Stationed On USS Enterprise USS ENTERPRISE - Navy Airman Apprentice Douglas L, Muir, son of Mr. and Mrs.Wal- ter H. Muir of 320 S. State, - Orem, Utah has left his home-port home-port at Alameda, Calif., for a western Pacific deployment a-board a-board the nuclear-powered aircraft air-craft carrier USS Enterprise. He is a former student of Orem High School. Petroleum Council Gets New Head DoUtJlaS ROVJWV AlflOe Frank Redd 1 i announce & efoniny at &v9Ld9liU - W mm mm mm mm mm mm mi u w Cfl JUiiia hmvB I.R. S. Independent Rear Suspension. An expensive item not found on many other cars like Datsun. We offer overhead cam engine and safety front disc brakes, too. Standard. Datsun 510. It has expensive features but it doesn't cost a lot. Special Offer: Test drive a Datsun before Oct. 15, and we'll pay to have a tree planted for you by the U.S. Forest Service in a national forest. And give you a free Ansel Adams poster, too. Drive a Dalian. Plant a tree. Nice for both of us! 510 4-Door $2,555 zdhihu FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE Washburn Motors 1635 So. STATE - OREM 225-3226 t t . f Sarah Men' Cotdner Sarah J. Men" Ferguson Cordner, 75, of 497 E. 400 S., Orem, died Wednesday morning at he Utah Valley Hospital of a stroke. She was born Dec. 22, 1896 In Lake Shore, a daughter of Andrew and MariaSimmons Fer guson. She married Jesse W. Cordner on Jan 9., 1918, in the Salt Lake Temple. She served as secretary of the Sharon Ward Relief Society president of the Timpanoos Ward Primary and served in the Primary for 20 years. For 50 years she was a Relief Society visiting teacher. Mrs. Cordner also was on the Old Folks Committee of Tim-panogos Tim-panogos Ward for 25 years, the last five as chairman. She also was a member of Timpanogos Camp, DUP, serving serv-ing as captain and vice president, of the American Legion Auxiliary Aux-iliary Post 72 for two years. Survivors include her husband, Orem; four sons and three daughters, DonF.Cordner.Diane Ross, Mrs. Richard (Beth; Due-ring, Due-ring, all of Salt Lake City; Mrs. LaMar (June) Olsen, Orem; Blaine Cordner, J. Calvin Cordner, Cord-ner, and Deaa W. Cordner, all of Provo; 25 grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; two sisters and one brother; Mrs. Annie Burch, American Fork; Mrs. Caroline Hall, Provo; and Eugene Eu-gene Ferguson, Salt Lake City. Funeral services were Saturday Satur-day at 11 a.m. in the Orem 31st Ward Chapel, 600 S. 800 E. under the direction of Bishop Boyd Call. Burial was ia the Orem City Cemetery. DORA C. H. LAKER Funeral services for Dora Catherine Hemmert Laker, 82, of 566 Marion St., Salt Lake City, who died Sunday in a Logachos-pital,were Logachos-pital,were held Wednesday in the Riverside Third Ward Chapel. Mrs. Laker was the mother of Mrs. Clyde H. (Anna) Williams of Orem. Burial was in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. CARLES BRADSHAW Charles Richard Bradshaw, 71, Hildale, died Saturday of nat-Soral nat-Soral causes at his home. He was the father of Muriel Makin, Orem, and Charles V.Bradwhaw, Alpine. Funeral services were held Tuesday. Interment Isaar Carl-ing Carl-ing Memorial Park, Colorado City. MORTUARY f SERVICES 373-1841 J PROVO PAULETTE KISAN - Funeral services were held Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. in the St. Francis Catholic church, with interment in Orem City Cemetery. PROVO HARRY E. (BUD) WILSON -Funeral services were held Saturday Sat-urday at U:00 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Interment East Lawn Memorial Hills Cemetery. PROVO CLARENCE E. BOLINDER -Graveside services were held in the Grantsville City Cemetery at 2:00 p.m. Friday. PROVO JAMES BLAUER BAUMGETER - Funeral services will be held Thursday at 11:00 a.m. in the Provo 24th ward chapel, 135 E. 2000 South, Orem. Interment Provo City Cemetery. PROVO GEORGE N.LARSEN-Funeral services are pending and will be announced by Berg Mortuary, Navy Airman Graduates HILL AIR FORCE BASE- Maj. Frank J. Redd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ruel Redd of Price, has been reassigned at Hill AFB as Chief of the Materials and Test Engineering Branch. The branch provides engineering engineer-ing test support for the Minute-man Minute-man missile and F-4 Phantom jet weapons systems. Prior to his new assignment, Major Redd was chief of the Minuteman Flight Simulation Development Section. The major has 15 years of Air Force service and is a graduate of the U. S. Military Academy at West Point. Prior to assignment at Hill AFB six months ago, Major Redd was on the faculty at West Point. He received a master's degree in aeronautics and astronautics from Stanford University in 1966 and is nearing completion on his doctorate in the same field. Major Redd is married to the former Myrna Christensen of Castle Dale, Utah. Her mother is Mrs. Bertha Christensen of Provo. The major and his wife have five children and reside inOrem. Knowledge Counts In Land Leasing Negotiating mineral leases is a lot like horse trading - it pays to know the merchandise - and all too often the landowner is low man on the totem pole because of lack of knowledge about the minerals industry. So says William A. Stevenson) head of Resource Management Company, a Salt Lake City-based firm designed to advise landowners land-owners on how to get the most out of the mineral rights on their lands. Leasing of lands to oil and mining companies and speculators spec-ulators has become an increasingly increas-ingly popular and profitable activity ac-tivity for Intermountain Area landowners with the resurgence of mineral exploration and development de-velopment in the region. The activity in oil and gas exploration ex-ploration and drilling has been increasing rapidly in Utah during dur-ing the past three years, sparking spark-ing leasing activity . throughout the state. But, Stevenson says, there are several reasons why the average landowner gets an average of two-thirds less than the mineral min-eral lease speculator for land with the same economic potential. D. L. 'Denny Dunn was named Chairman of the Utah petroleum pe-troleum Council at the annual meeting of that group held in Salt Lake City September 13. Mr. Dunn succeeds Louis H. Butterworth of American Oil in the Chairman's assignment. Also elected to Council offices were W.J. Snoddy (Phillips) as vice chairman and W. E. Mc-Kenzie Mc-Kenzie (Chevron) as secretary-treasurer. secretary-treasurer. Mr. Dunn got his start in the oil business 40 years ago when he leased a Shell Service Station Sta-tion in Salt Lake City. After three years as a station operator, oper-ator, Mr. Dunn went into sales work for SheU Oil, filling positions po-sitions in Ogden, Great Falls and Spokane. Mr. Dunn was district manager in Salt Lake City when Shell quit the Utah market and heacquired all of their properties in the Salt Lake Valley. Val-ley. Mr. Dunn sold the entire operation to Sinclair Refining Corporation in 1952. Since 1954, Mr. Dunn has represented Union Oil in Utah Reserve Commander Capt. Douglas G. Rowley, formerly of Orem, Utah, was maae company commander for the 786th Quartermaster Petroleum Petro-leum Company Army Reserve. Capt. Rowley graduated as a 1st Lt. after OCS at FortBenning Georgia. He served as religious re-ligious officer for his platoon. He also served as a Company Commander at Fort Bel vior, Virginia, Vir-ginia, from 1967 to 1968, and left there to serve in Viet Nam for a year with the 1st infantry division where he received the Bronze Star, Air Medal and Commendation Award. He will graduate from BYU this year with a major in Elementary El-ementary Education.' He is married to the former Betty Lou Prescott and they have two children. Capt. Rowley is the Douglas Rowley son of Grant R. and Fern D. Rowley from Orem, Utah. W 0 Tr R GRAM I lAlfl He Is Loaded With New Ideas For A Better School District Alpine School Board Pd. Political Adv. I $350 $1500 ' Y $5000 I I 1 &itMa v 1 -'' V ' 1 GENERAL VN. 11 'll " ! 1 . 1 electric !JL 1 "hr; V ; I CLOCK I 1! ji . ; AMITY "FLAIR" ',-. I Lighted dial; "snooz alarm" plus 1 ' I , FRENCH PURSE 1 "view alarm" 1 ' ' ' ' 1 Genuine cowhide; deep coin pocket; 1 Nw 2$ M k V credit card holder; bill compartment. Jt,- --ml 1 1 AMITY "SCOT" BILLFOLD 1 fN t . 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