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Show rl CM M SUNDAY. DECEMBER 2. 1956 Utah County, Utah Qy h Gov. state school lands in the ' Lee Friday urged Aneth Field area of San Juan j. Bracken the Utah Land Board to cancel County because "the state has leases Issued on 7,456 acres of been deprived of an enormous oil-ric- SALT LAKE CITY (UP) j Cedar Fort Native Dies In California . Karl Lester CEDAR FORT ;of Cedar native 38, Messersmlth, died Wednesday,; Nov. 28, Valley, in Norwalk, Calif. Mr. Messersmlth Was jborn Nov. 15. 1918. in Cedar Fort, a son of Ralph H. and Margaret Elizabeth Berry Smith. He married Ruth Leatham 14 years ago. Surviving are his wife and a foster son, Joel Karl Messer- mith of Norwalk. Calif.: his rarents of Cedar Fort, a grand mother. Mrs. Annie M.I Smith of Lehi. and the following brothers and sisters: Bernal D. Messer smlth of Pleasant Grove; Dean B. Smith and Robert H. Messer smlth of Cedar Fort; Leland D. Messeysmith of Layjton; Gaylon L. Messersmith of Tooele; Mrs. Aldred? (La Von) Jones of Ameri can Fork; Mrs. Harry (Mar- caret) Danielson of Ogden; Mrs. Clifton (Lela) Cook and Mrs. Knollin (Shirley) Haw? of Lehi. Funeral services will be con riiiftpd Mondav at 1 t.m. in Cedar Fort: with Bishop Erne Cook officiating. Friends may call at the A. H. Wing Mortuary in Lehi Sunday evening, and at the home of his parents in Cedar Fort Monday until time of services.! Burial will be, in 'Cedar iFort. : Gun Accident By His Brother Alpine For Salt Lakers Lee Urges Cancellation Of State School Lands Leases amount of revenue.' In a letter to the board. Lee that the leases be put suggested r up for pid. The letter alsoj j noted that leases had been approved last spring at fch usual rate of 50 cents per acre, despite the fact that the lands were in an area of proved oil reserves and could have been leased at much higher rate of return to the state." k should take immediate steps to cancel the leases, refund the mon ey involved, advertise the lands in question for lease V auction or competitive bid, and se'up the necessary rules so that in! the fu ture the, state will be better pro . tected." The lands in question are all cated in the San Juan County par tion of the Paradox Basin. Oi was discovered in tlwj are last Feb. 5 by the Texas Co.! Navalo Indians in the same area last month called for bids and is sued leases on their reservation lands for $1.25 per acre plus bo nuses of approximately ?27 milH ! (Continued from Page One) Wyoming Solon Urges' Special Congress Session on OiL Crisis Panquitch Man Killed In Crash . WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney has called for a special session of Congress to make sure the emergency plan does not "sult in a jworld petroleum monopoly, The Wyoming Democrat, one of state of Missouri is classed as a Midwestern state. But an add! tional reasjon is probably to be found ihf the relatif ely i greater con 13RAT .T T.AKF. CITY (UP) A exists in, the Midwest than on either coast. boy playfully dueling his servatlon that Graveside services y ear-ol- d ALPINE PANGUIT0H (UP)4-- Utah's 1956 brother with a rule Southern Stand Not Upanlmous I for Willard Olsen, 68, from Salt highway death toll moved f one as interesting as the Sentiment outside ahead of the paceVfet last year Lake City, were held recently accidentally shot and tilled him Equally in a motel apartment Friday the South is the sentimlent Jnslde he South. Nearly with the death Friday night of a in the Alpine Cty cemetery. T.aVa "Mv out of six in the South favors positive steps tor effect school inHe was bdrji and raised in in Coif one Panguitch man. Crissey, 13, old police tegration,' and an additional one out of live is either resigned to its Alpine and 4s survived by a heTimothy Wallace Deuel, 31, The victim, r was home alone with his young-aor favors some but date. at distant it, was actually brother, John C. Olsen of Al very killed inevitability before midnight shortly KTwhtvr J attics, when, at Dart iboth sham and interesting, when the car in which he differences are The was a regional ajbove pine. of a game, each weni to a corner but they are not totally unexpected. Perhaps a more revealing tabuHe died of a heart attack. the and left highway passenger and picked up a 22 caliber rifle. lation is oqe which shows the differences jln sentiment that exist times. several overturned immy told me he ad a bui among people with differing amounts of, education f ' Funeral services for Lelia The mishap occurred two mllel a bullet so I his in put gun let were urraue or Smith, 81, Salt Lake City, of Kanab on If. S. Highway north scnooi XsOucgc bcqooi mgn held last Friday at 1 p.m. in in my gun;" Timothy told officers. less education 89. education car was driven by Jack The education the weapon discharged Tim the Alpine Ward Chapel under Whensummoned L. MasteFsoin, 23, Panguitch. The help from the mo-to the directon of 'Bishop Ried CJ othy of should extent same his the go Negroes injuries were not 19. Boy.ce, tel attendant, Bryan )' closed. , Burgess. on arrival at Salt schools that white children do, Mrs. Smith lived in Alpine James was dead The dea th was the first on Utah and be schools should separate hospital. most of her life up until jus re Lake Generalare with in immediately highways iu three days and the son of Mr. and done: away The boys a tew she has when 193rd of the year. During a cor of .. .12 spent all the cently country. parts ll Mr? . Harry Crissey who reportedly weeks with her children. responding period last year Utah Denver. Every attempt should be made to ' she moved here recently from At thev time of her death had 192 tfaffic fatalities. county1 attorney do away! with separate schools ' .jbfef deputy a with Lake was in Salt City was satisfied for Negro students, but a Jay Basks said he reasonable time should be given daughter where she died of a the i shooting was- accidental and to heart attack. ;. . no inquest . .14 work out the problem. .;. 24 37 would be held. Timesj I' Thi tlm miT come when NtcYnni1 (Continued from Page One) j ' j . pro-sejgregat- ion pro-lntegregti- on j the Senate's most active anti-trus a d Congress campaigners, should return to see that the emergency plan does not favor big oil companies over small st ! v i : 1 I com-pani- cs and the people. ' j j'- (Continued from Page One) the eight-je- t plane apparently bellied into the soft earth and" bounced three or four times be-- , fore it broke up and burst into flames. f .. Air Force officials said thekf was no indication as to the. cause of th cras'a. They said the plane carried no ammunition. i , j ! ! Four Utah Obituaries CITY Sarah vine PickneU, 243 E. South Tem- Ir- SALT LAKE ple, died Thursday; funeral was held Saturday. Lula Buttkowsky Ave., died Casto, 80, p9-3r- d Thursday; funeral was held Sat' ' , urday.OGDEN WaUam K. McCarty. 72, 2746 N. 5th E., died Friday. Georee L. Browning, 57, former -- Charles neral Chapel. Harris, 61, Street, died 222-23- rd Thursday. j - Veins LEWTSTOftf Porter Hyer, 58, died Wednesday; fu- neral was held Saturday. LOGAN 67, died Samuel A. Lundberg, Thursday in Redlands, 4 whitf children nhhuld m tn ihm same schools': but it will take years in some places, and it shouldn't be pushed. 18 32 36 The Supreme Court decision was a mistake, and white and Negro students should never be forced to go to the same schools. .40 2d 16 .16 None, don't know, or no answer 4 It is significant that those who have had the benefit of greater Calif.; funeral Monday 2 p.m., education are most in favor of an integrated education for both f races. h Hall Mortuary. j Christine Martha Next week, the Negroes views on segregation. PRICE Crockett, 85, died Thursday; fu(Copyright 1956. John F. Dille Coll neral Was held Saturday. Robert Henry KAYSVILLE William and files, American died 2nd 58 N. W., 76, Fork,! and Robert, Provo: and Young, (Continued From Page One) Thursday. three sisters, IVfs. Harold (Ida) Lenora B. BEAVER DAM Sorenson, and Sirs. Jack (Irene) died 78, Friday; funeral the cab, was thrown out and Grayson, Salt fLake City and Bigler, 1 p.mi, Beaver Dam LDS pinned io the grojund by the bed Mrs. Harold (Gloria) Middleton, " of the truck. One of the truck Portland, Ore. j' ChapeLj Mrs. Pierce was born in wheels struck the head of his wife, wio had been riding on the Pleasant Grove May 20, 1937, a rear of the truck with Mrs. Niel-so- daughter of Williani and La Von Benson Andersoli, and graduated The accident was investigated in 196 'from PlisaiU Grdve high by Sgt. jMelvin Grant of the State school and LDS Seminary. Survivors inc ude Iher parents, Highway Patrol, and Deputy Boyd Durrani of the Utah County a sister, Mrs. fljenneth (Sandra) Sheriff's office. Rigbjl, Salt Lae City; and the Mr. Pierce was born in Ameri- following brothers apd sisters of can Fork Oct. 29j 1935, a son of Pleasant ' Grovej: Wayne, Sheila, George D. and Ida Manwaring MarUjjne, George, James and Pierce. He graduated from Gaylon. J i and school Funeral arrangements will be American Fork high the LDS Seminary, and married announced by. Anderson and Sons I Jean Anderson in Pleasant Grove Mortuary. on June 29, 1956. He was a member of (the Utah National Guard BUILT ON LAfA and was employe! at the Geneva Catania, second city of Sicily, is built on nine layers of lava Works of U.S. Steel. He if survived by bis parents, from Mount Efia. Three layers American Fork; five brothers, are prehistoric! the last as re Blaine and Max, Salt Lake City, cent as 1669. i CEDAR CITY BANK APPLICATION HELD UP SALT LAKE CITY (UP) State Bank Commissioner Seth Young would be at least said today-i- t he would reach a before January on an application for a decision Cedar in bank City. unit ......... Couple Killed . j There was no immediate ground- -' ing order for the planes at the base. After two earlier crashes all B52 training missions were halted at Castle while investigators hunted for the cause of, the mishaps. . In the first crash last February near Tracy, Calif., four crewmen, work out arrangements bringing the refugees to the United tatet under agreements to be made With Austria and the inter!governmentkl Committee on jEurppean1 ' Migra' tion. About 6,500 of the refugees win receive Refugee Relief A'ctj Visas under the emergency! program initiated three weeks ao. The remaining 15,000 wiU b4 admitted under parQle prvvlskwis of the Immigration and NationAlkyActtbe announcement said, When the! 21,500 have been ex hausted, the situation wiM be re examined, the President said. , ' !! , ; were killed and four survived. The second mishap occurred near Ma-deCalif., on Sept. 17, killing five men. Two others parachuted ; ra 1 to safety. Sixteen-year-ol- f d j of r mm n. ftt, irJ wa wt GRANITE FURNITURE at -- A TIDIER KITCHEN c , -M- ' 'I- - i Roger Biake-man- n Cressey was one of several eyewitnesses to he disaster Friday night. 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See us now too! Christmas free ham, . All new sensational Eureka. o weight. Simplicity is tho distinctive keynote. Finest imported fabrics witK d colors provide the desired natural unique texture, in wanted, effect Tailored by Kuppenheimer to highest attainable custom standards youll readily recognize a Kuppenheimer as incomparablo i , with ordinary suits, It rolls on swivel New power, light wheels. ball-beari- ng Complete with Deluxe tools see live demonstra tion at The Granite. soft-keye- i r' DRESS 0. RI G H T '" ' if :1 CONVEMIEMT CREDIT i - WE WELCOME YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT ' ' ; v Use the convenience of a Gift Certificate . 78 West Center - Provo. ' I' ' 1; " i PLUS FREE Hflf.l! RELRfEE(Y: EVERYWHERE movo 4 you can't afford not to! - . in i Come in and let us show you. Kuppenheimer suits from $90. V ; iir ' '. Mj jTj 1C TO) - - 1134 North 5th West Just South of Provo Hirer) (On Main Highway, 91w UWttki ...ftUU3l ,. 1050 East 21st South A ... !.. J.: : r . - ... 48th South and Sfatc - ni LI ' ' - .. v ,' - . ,..., - ' , 'I Ten Killed j j resident, died Tuesday; funeral lion. D. H. Whittenburg, State Land 1 p.m., Lindquist and .Sons FuAlton Board chairman, said the board was required by law to issue leases whenever proper application is made. He added that enabling legislation by the -- Legislature would be necessary in order to hold up leases and oal for com petitjve, bids. Moderate Course Favored Boy Killed in Rites Held In H ERALD - - ' ' ; . . - -- ' H ' ' " -- - |