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Show MONDAY, JANUARY 20, Utah County, Utah 1958 DAILY HERALD 15 20 Stocks Utilities Rails 107.07 65 2.94 151.41 .02 71.38 .59 Yesterday Today MUTUAL FUNDS Quotations: Close Open Saturday's Closing Bid Asked 75 Va Va'a Allied Chcm 5.98 5.53 26 U Affil Fund . :j 26 4 Al'.is Cham 11.66 10.79 28 V Cdn Gen Alum Ltd 28k 16.11 42 42 4 Chemical A;ner Can 2137 4038 E and H Bal Fund . .19 99 Anicr' Cvan M04 19.97 12 12 E and K Stk Fund ..1849 A.vser Rad 14.93 13 62 38 38 V Fund Inv Amcr Smelt 7.73 7.15 171 A Inc Inv Tel and Tel ....170 9.82 80 80 Mass Inv Growth .... 9 08 .... Tob 10.71 9.91 19 Mas Inv Trust 19 4 Atvh T arid S Fe 11.01 1010 38 38 Telv and Elec F.rth St "ft 61 61 OVER THE COUNTER Trac Bid Asked hr..-! 54 53 r Today's Quotations: .40 .34 38 38 ( 'ark Equip- ..... Big Pinev O and G .54 49 34 Oil 34 English Com Pd Rfjr 31.50 29.50 nil 38 irr,,,itv 38 G Uucvcr and R 38.25 37.75 56 56 D w Cht-First Sec Bk 181 182 Interstate Mtr L ...11.00 11.75 Pont ' I)u 99 Va Lang Co 99 J.2Va 7.75 Kas: Kod 2.87 Va Const 2.372 28 V 28 Lang pis, 23.87 22 75 89 Mtn Fuel 80 .30 26 40 Oil Sec 40 KnrU Mnu.r 4.00 3. 75 Metals 62Rare 62 Klt-(ItX, 5.00 Three Sts Nat Gas . 4.37 49 49 , (Jen Ir's 14.25 13.25 35 Utah Southn Oil 35 M;"r 2.12 V, 2.37 . 14-9- - The bird was extremely friendly and came straight to her when she stepped outside. For his own safety she put him inside with her other birds. But, she would like the owner to come and get him. He's too big and she does not want to keep him. -r r Charles Carpenter - ' Springville Man Dies LDS - ' Gor.dv.-r.- r; j Oil f 1 H,.rv- ! . r I. r ( , ' v.,,.., c; .,, I',., c p i ': p;. ( ,,. K lie n . .,,-"- ; . w -r Vm Vv. lV-- ' 42U ' 26 47 45 49 i;car .rbide 32 35 94 26 25 35 94 26 25 A I Today's Quotations: P,,,nuni Steel 54 26 26 22 63 40 22 63 40 4 10 2 16 4 10 2 17 EXCHANGE Bid Asked . Klines Glad He- B Mtn S' T and T K;co Argentine Utah Id Sug 1 1 54 . . 61 32 . .Gun-sight . - 115 114 3 2 4 5 Ike Warns . Glen-woo- d Spanish Fork Sets Polio Campaign At-ki- n, co-chair- Fifth-Eight- (Continued from rage One) spective increase in the national security expenditures." lie was sure that the Russian challenge could ' be met "without distorting our economy or de stroying the freedoms that we cherish." "Whatever our national security requires, our economy can provide and we can afford to pay," he said. "There are good grounds for confidence riot only that economic growth can be resumed without prolonged delay, bait also that a vigorous expansion of our economy can be sustained over the years," the President said. However, he warned that inflationary dangers will reappear with a business pickup. The government, he said, will do its ut- most to combat them. Ike Set (Continued from Page One) -- Provo Burial Set For Helper Man door-to-do- or El-wo- De-Gra- od w, Native of Provo Dies California Harry Patten broadcast and during a telecast program at a Republican dinner this evening. Other GOP leaders including Vic e President .Richard M. Nixon will join in; the program from their places; at dinners iri other cities. ...A total- of 40,000 diners were expected to participate in 44 $10 to dinners in 27 states and the District of Colum30-min- $100-a-pla- te $100-a-pla- te bia. -- v. The program will be aired by NBC radio and television starting at 9:30 p.m. e.s.t. The dinners celebrated the fifth anniversary of Eisenhower's assumption of the presidency five years ago. The theme as stated by the Republican National Committee, was a "tribute to five years of achievement and salute to Republican Congress." half-hou- r -- - President Eisenhower was a lieutenant - colonel of the U. S. Army at the oubreak of World War II. Temperature Hits of Season other - (5 PHOENIX. Ariz. Frank be in the Richard E. McArtle, chief the U.S. Forest Service, appears before tothe assembly Thursday answer questions remorning recent fores service polgarding icies on grazing allotments. Don Clyde, Heber City, Utah, president of the National Wool Growers. Assn., will deliver the annual president's report at the first general session Tuesday. Funeral services PALMYRA for Dean Nielson, 29, one of four men killed in a coal mine disaster last week in Spring Canyon, will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Palmyra LDS Chapel. Friends may call at the church between 11:30 a.m. and time of services Tuesday. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork Cemetery. Mr. Nielsen was born April 5, 1928, in Salem, a son of William J. L. and Hazel Beddoes Nielsen. He moved with his parents as a boy to Palmyra and grew to manhood here, attending schools in Spanish Fork. He married Barbara Joan Daniels. He was rider for the Spanish Fork Cattle Association. He also served in the Armed Forces. Surviving' are his wife of Spring Canyon and two small sons, and his parents, also of Spring Canyon. Also surviving are three brothers and two sisters, Mrs. Wallace (Alene) Kirkwood, Helper; Rulon Nielsen, Sunnyside; William Edward Nielsen, Grand Junction, Colo.; Joan and Jerry Nielsen, Spring Can yon. Two Planes (Continued from Page One) tified the seven crewmen aboard a C97 Military Air Transport Service plane missing in the Pacific. AH were married and had families living at or near this base. By UNITED to cloudy this afternoon Mostly cloudy west and partly cioudy east tonight. Mostly cloudy; Tuesday with some snow likely west portion. Not so cold tonight. High today 25 to 40, low tonight 5 to 15 east and 10 to 25 west, high Tu day 35 to 45. ' high thin Ogden: cloudiness this afternoon. Mostly cloudy tonigM and Tuesday wilh snow likely Tuesday. Not so cold tonight. High both days near 40, low tonight 22 . Logan: variable high thin cloudiness this afternoon. Mostly cloudy tonight and uesday with snow y Tuesd Not so cold likely tlow 25, night. High tonight 15, high Tue ay 32. Provo: variable high thin cloud iness this afternoon. Partly cloudy By UNITED PRESS DETROIT Actress Paulette Goddard in quitting her stage role and returning to New York to BOISE, Idaho (UP). Idaho's civil defense and disaster relief director, Admiral W. C. Specht, believes the Gem state's 10 northernmost counties could absorb more than 140,000 evacuees from the Pacific Coast in event of a national emergency. For that reason among others, the admiral said, there will be a meeting of Idaho civil defense officials at Coeur D'Alene Wednesday. The Coeur D'Alene meeting will e follow a meeting of civil defense officials from Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington at Spokane today and Tuesday. marry novelist Erich Maria Re- marque: "The date will be in the very near future we have been enfive gaged years." . WASHLNGTON-JVl- aj. Gen. Ber- nard Schriever on this country's missile program: "I do not trfink we are moving ahead fast enough." CLAYTON, Ala.-Cir- cuit Judge George Wallace in refusing to allow federal civil rights investigators to review the records of his court: "Only a high court has fjc3j authority under our separation of powers" theory of iw-jroonroc- WASHINGTON Rep. Emanuel on why ho is in- Celler troducing a bill to grant tax cut (D-N.- - Organs (R-N.Y- Doctor A I FURNITURE DENTURES Bepalrlar - Itf finishing FREE ESTIMATES DTR Co. Frank T. Reynolds PLATES 7 71 S. 1st E. RELINED PLATE REPAIRS FR 3-26- 40 how soon you can play. Call for Details FR 3-68- 57 No. Univ. Boise Boston Chicago Denver Las Vegas Logan Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Ogden Omaha Phoenix (R-Nev- - Chester J. Peterson Seattle 36 Spokane Washington W. Yellowstone 35 .24 53 19 14 3l' 44 44 18 18 41 St. George St. Louis T 29 --4 48 62 68 28 57 27 Provo 8 35 -- 6fl Salt Lake City E. San Francisco .). 12 27 57 20 60 26 49 36 39 50 W T 22 ."W Pocatello Portland Phoenix Pep. 10 14 37 25 23 Butte Organized In .3030 Bismarck New Stake Min. 43 22 37 .48 4 T 42 15 ; 15 43 21 34 37 28 24 Wreck May Be Lost Yacht Congress ought not Smith was named to head the follow to along with what new Phoenix jNorth Stake. Serving merely the President requests "like a lit- with him as! counselors will be tle spotted pup under a Tennes- Dow Octlundl and Cafl C. Jacob MIAMI (UP) Salvage crews ; off the Florida see red wagon." dived Keys Satur- - ( son He said the county doesn't need day for a sunken wreck which im the weekend meet Presidinf three missile programs and "five be the missing yacht Revonoc, ings were Delbert L. Stapley, mem- may Air Forces." owned by New York Publisher ber of the Council of Twelve "As a matter of fact if you and Carl W. Buehner, burned the Pentagon down there'd Apostles, Conover's yawl with five second counselor to the Presiding be people run outta there you been missing aboard has persons Salt Lake City. hadn't heard of for 40 years," he Bishopric, since Jan. 2, when it was caught added. in a storm with winds up to 65 miles per hour. Besides Conover, BOISE, Idaho (UP) Spending other persons aboard included his and for $287,300,000 public and totaling wife, son and daughter-in-law- , and construction a friend. equip private ment in Idaho during 1958 has The Coast Guard, which only been forecast in a special report abandoned its search for recently issued by the First Security Bank the missing craft, said another This Is some $10,000,000 higher yacht, the Caprice, ran into wreckthan such outlays in 1957, the re SALT LAME CITY (UP) Salt age about 75 yards off East Wash- port added. Lake banker Orval W. Adams toDivers and surface vessels from day was ejected a director of Mountain Fuel Supply Co. He suc- Miami and Key West scanned the ceeded the late Herbert A. Snow. area. Coast. Guard search and W.T. Nightingale, president of rescue officials said they would the natural gas utility, announced also look into the matter. (Continued from Page One) the election after a meeting of the Representatives of New York Indirectors. firm's surance Company Chubb and Son, reported that 'a "storm was brewis president of the new underwriters for Conover, said Jt Adams incident. over the ing" It showed that Symington asked ly merged Zion's First National "seems likely" that the wreck is the Revonoc. Twining: "Do you think that these Bank. hearings are hurting Mr. (Secresaid He 45-fo- ot Adamsj Appointed Director of Mountain Fuel ght Court Reverses til ; 111 win 77 T iiyy iiiiiiPiOi JfeMfel 1 Pink C400-S- kll CLOC K RADIO before noon for your Phon mon y later tho tarns day! You own ra payment plan I 24 CmIi M Tm S304.76 tmik Mr Ym U 571.43 30.0t 0.00 7C4.5Z 0.0 24.00 1054.84 0THC1 AMOUNTS Wakes you to music automatically Becorator styled in Shell Pink. Hurry in while stocks last at this JUUatMy flf.OO 21 of the year I Buy UP TO $2000 aalactyour 95 I low, low price! Sorry, no mail or pbone order. Jriee includes 90 day warranty on both jhxrts and labor, IN PROPORTION GmTQliAILi 1. DUCKETT SALES and SERVICE A. FINANCE COMPANY 10 of Provo West Center Street LOG AH M AONA .02 28 Military . Provo Max. Atlanta Billings David PHOENIX (UP) Hey wood and Rudger G. Smith were chosen presidents of the 'wo four-statdivisions of the Phoenix Stake of Saints Church, the Latter-d- a The stake was divided in a ceremonv at the Sixth Ward Cha- pel Sunday. WASHINGTON (UP) President wood cjan tinues as president Eisenhower's new budget has a of Hey the Phoenix Stake, a post he lot of "deadwood" in it, accord- had held ei years. His coun- ing to Sen. George W. Malone will selors be Martin C. Tate and They were: 1. Capt. Glenn Niewald, 29, aircraft commander, Travis AFB. 2. 1st Lt. Leonard W. McClary, 24, first pilot, Fairfield, Calif. 3. 1st Lt. William H. Becker, 24, navigator, Vallejo, Calif. 4. 1st Lt. Jerry L. Flaherty, 23, navigator, Fairfield. 5. M. Sgt. Frederick M. Rivers, 37, engineer, Fairfield. 6. S. Sgt. Edwin C. Hatfield, 33, engineer, Suisun, Calif. 7. Airman 1C Upton Pearson, 34, tary of State John Foster) Dulles' loadmaster, Travis AFB. diplomatic negotiations?" Twining replied: "Not at all, I am not talking about these hearings." The general had testified he was One) from (Continued concerned that the American peoPage overviolent ple and the world were reaching teach and advocate conclusion" the the "mistaken of the U.S. government. throw now is United States Decision Waited For militarily inHe said t: is to to Russia. the ferior This decision was carried appeals court here, which waited could weaken the nation in negofor determination of precedent by tiations and even "increase the the U. S. Supreme Court before probability of total war." A spokesman said the Pentagon handing down a decision on the Hawaiians' appeal. first learned that the senators reThe Yates conviction was were "urLappy" through a Post versed last June 17 when the high & Times Herald reporter, John G. court freed five California Com- Norris. Norris later reported that munist leaders and ordered new the subcommittee was considering a Demotrials for nine others. The Su- naming two members the declared that Court to screen crat and a. Republican preme Smith act does not forbid advocat- the censors future editing. ing overthrow of the government The preparedness subcommittee as an abstract principle, so long was to resume its hearing today as the idea is not coupled with with testimony from Adm. Arleigh efforts to bring about actual revo- A. Burke, chief of .nf val operalution. tions, and Navy missile chiefs. The court stressed that mere proof of membership or even leadThere are said to be as many ership in the Communist party is not enough for a. Smith act con- as 15,000,000 "sundown" farmers in the United States. viction. 52 Glen Bros. Music southeast. - cone-bearin- Hammond Spinet so-col- to-a- Quotes in the News (Reg.U.S. Pat. Off.) - tonight. Mostly cloudywith some snow likely. Not tonight. High today 38, low tonight 18, high Tuesday 40. Five - day forecast fox Utah, Saturday: light snow through northwest portion midweek and southland east portions latter part of week. Temperatures averaging from 5 degrees above normal m northwest to 5 below normal in variable of Palmyra Rites Set for Coal Mine Victim j Sen. will (UP) (R-Wy- Wednesday. Bradford Ross under the diCemetery Santaquin rection of the Keith Jolley Mortuary in Payson. will Barrett A. address sheepmen from 25 states during the 93rd annual convention of the National Wool Growers Assn. which opened here today. Barrett will address the growers at the afternoon session on La-Vo- Temple in SPRINGVILLE Charlesa Mr. Thomas heldMr.theThomas following QUOTATIONS: Carpenter, 74, died Sunday at lina Bid Askea Provo Hospital, following church offices while he was a Today's Quotations: 02 .01 Atlas illness. .06 .04 gering member of the church in England: Bapco .01 .00 30. 1883, Beehive March was He born .18 .16 Branch clerk and branch presiBig Horn .04 in Tintic, Utah, .03 Big Indian ...... dent of the Pontipool Branch from .01 .01 Circle Cliffs a son of Frank.25 .20 1915 to 1939; district president Columex .03 lin and Emma 02 to 1939 Congress when he moved 1945, from .12 .07 Federal Oil Smith Carpen.75 to Birmingham, England, where .70 Federal U ter. He receiv.18 .15 Gold Cloud he again served in church offices .03 . .03 ed his educa.14 .11 . until he came to America in 1947. Met and Int. Oil Richin tion 2.87 2.62 Lisbon They made their home in Spring3.12 2.87 Mc Lucky and field :08 .07 TJtt ville until 1948 when they moved Fpal .05 04 Producers schools. to Provo. He has been custodian 1.15 i"3 Radorock .30 20 of the Brigham Young University. he In 1908 Shumway .37 .32 Standard He was a high priest of the Provo .05 .04 married Emma Sun Uran .53 .48 Fifth Ward, and had served as White Canyon M a r r i t t in .18 .15 Green Mtn in Provo in 1950 stake missionary Utah. Beaver, and again in 1951. made They Surviving are his wife, two sons their home in Mr. Carpenter Harold G. Spanish Fork until her death in and three daughters, 1927. He later married Luella Thomas, Provo; W. Alvin Thomas, Castledale Salt Lake City; Mrs. Harry SPANISH FORK Plans for the Pannell Greenlee in 1928. Their (Gladys) Pennington, Springville; Utah, on Oct. 15, 1958 poliomyelitis fund campaign Dennis Collins, (Edith) was later solemnized Mrs. marriage in Spanish Fork wre completed Mrsi (Norma) Thomas, Orem; in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. this week. City drive 1930 they moved to SpringProvo; 29 grandchildren, three In are Mrs. George Parkinson ville. He followed mining in his brothers and four sisters, Wallace, and Mrs. Henry C. Schiller. earlier life and was a culturist Robert and Cyril Thomas, Millie Final details of the local drive for the Springville Fish Hatchery Atwood, Eva Jarvis, and Florence were completed under super- for a number of years. and Beatrice Thomas, all of Engvision of the county director, land. are his wife, SpringSurviving Mrs. Denzil Brown, and Utah ville; one daughter, Mrs. Edward Funeral services will be held County Mothers March of Dimes H. (Helen) Andrews, Salt Lake Thursday at 12 noon at the Provo chairman, Mrs. Kent Tolboe. In- City; three stepdaughters, Mrs. h Ward Chapel, with cluded in the local phase of J. M. (Gretchen) Ferrin, and Bishop Richard Larsen of the Proactivity will be the placing' of Mrs. Madoline Devey, Salt Lake vo Fifth Ward officiating. Friends posters at strategic locations in City, and Mrs.-- Verl (Betty) may call at the Berg Mortuary business houses and a collection Rawlings, Springville, and 15 Wednesday evening from 6 to 8 campaign in the schools. A door-- t grandchildren. p. m. and Thursday prior to servFuneral services will be con- ices. Burial will be in the Springdoor canvass will be conducted as the local portion of the ducted Thursday at 1 p.m. in ville Evergreen Cemetery. . the Springville First LDS Ward Mothers March Jan. 30. distbusiness the Chapel, whem bishop Maurice Supervising Bird will officiate. Friends may will be rict and school drives call at the Claudin Funeral George Parkinson. Ward chairHome canvass Wednesday evening from men for the 7 to 9 p.m. and at the family and other activities are Mrs. Clark, First; Mrs. Grant residence 73? S. 5th E. Thursday prior to services. Burial will be Snell, Twelfth; Mrs. Dan Funeral services HELPER Ninth; Mrs. F. J. Faux, in the Evergreen Cemetery. Collins for James Kavanagh, 69, Mrs. Ferris Wood, Second; who died Friday at the Holy Eighth; Mrs. Clarence Shepherd, Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City, Fifth; Mrs. Roy Chistensen, following an illness "will be held Schiller, Third; Mrs. Henry in Wednesday at 12 noon at St. Mrs. Clark Stewart, Fourth; Catholic Church in Sixth; Mrs. Hales, Fay Loose Stiehl Gordon, 66, Anthony's Utah. Helper, Seventh; Mrs. Glade Schwartz, native of Provo and a of Father Edward F. Dowlin'g will daughter Tenth, and Mrs. Velyn McLellan, the later Col. Charles Edwin read the requiem mass. Burial Eleventh. Loose, a prominent Provo pioneer, will be in the Provo City died Saturday at her home in Palo Cemetery under the direction of Alto, Calif., of a heart attack. ANSWERS HERRING NOTE the Berg Mortuary. She was born Dec. 22, 1891, in FRANKFURT, Germany (UP) Provo, a daughter of Charles EdGeorge Eisenbart sent off a re- win and Mary Suit Seeks Proceeds ply today to a letter delivered by Jane a herring. Eisenbart6 bought th3 Loose. She reFrom Sale of Home herring in a Frankfurt fish shop ceived her eduand found a small celluloid cap- cation in Provo sule with a note inside when he schools and Kenneth A. and Melva D. cut it up for frying. The note graduated from Baum, Orem, have filed suit in Lofoten the the Brigham said: "Greetings from Fourth District Court, against D. Arlo Allen and ''Doe One and Islands, Maxim Djerkahn, Reykja- Young UniversiDoe Two," charging they failed vik, Iceland." Eisenbart wrote tto ty, and from, the Mills in to receive proceeds from sale he used whether College Djerkahn asking of their home. th herring on purpose or whether Oakland, Calif. the capsule was dropped into the She studied voice Defendant Allen, said the comunder Oscar sea and swallowed by the fish. plaint, about May 25, 1956 "purSanger in New Si ported' to sell the property for York. She was Airs. Uoraon to Ephraim Reed the active in dramatics at BYU, sang and plaintiffs Elaine H. Hall" for $4,200 in public and played the leading and that plaintiffs at the time roles in many dramas. had about $1,800 equity in the Low She married Dr. William J. home. Stiehl who died in 1925. On Aug. The complaint charged defendProvo's official tempera22, 1928, she married George A. Allen "received $2,400 but ant ture at the airport observGordon in Salt Lake City. Dr. Stiehl to pay plaintiffs and failed failed ance station hit Its low of the practiced dentistry in Provo for to account to them despite reseason early this morning many years prior to his death. 11 degrees above zero. Mrs. Gordon made her home in peated demands." Several unofficial Southern California for a short a or temperatures time and later returned to Salt degree two lower were reported Lake City. In 1944, she and her A metal or shaving throughout the city. husband moved to Park City, cream tube toothpaste can as be used Low Sunday morning was where they owned and operated in an emergency. In the soldera forest, 18 above. the Central Drug Company. In heavy of copper wire will piece 1955, they sold the business and serve as a iron and moved to Palo Alta, Calif., where pitch from soldering g trees can be used as flux for emerthey made their home since. Surviving are her husband, Palo gency repairs. Alto; two sons and two daughters, Mary S. Dahl, Salt Lake City; Celia J. Koehler, Palo Alto; Wilf up to 83 per cent for small busi liam J. Stiehl, Salt Lake City; A Limited Number nesses: D. New York Gordon, "Small City; business has 2been Garey caught in a triple squeeze of dis- 12 grandchildren and, one brother proportionate taxes, credit short- Clarence C. Loose, Provo. Funeral services will be held age and monopoly." Friday at 2 p. in. in the Berg WASHINGTON Friends Rep. Kenneth Drawing Room Chapel. B. Keating the at call .) in urging may mortuary ThursCongress to act promptly on his day evening from 6 to 8 p. m. Available For Rent bill to authorize the federal gov- and Friday prior to services. ernment to crack down on the Burial will be in the Provo City Which includes the following Mafia: Cemetery. 6 Individual Lessons "The fact that few "of the operAll Necessary Music ators of these nefariou- - groups Dentist returns Delivery to Your Home have been brought to book is due, Rent Will Apply on in part, to the fact that after extended trip out of they operPurchase ate across state lines and are thus state. often able to avoid state law enYou will be surprised forces." son of Jr. and t. Friends may n call at the Ross Sr., residence Monday evening and Tuesday prior to services. Burial ' -- a 33 42 65 26 47 45 50 61 i Hill ii 56 o i; 48 55 86 r! Air Li,n Steel VAjh P and L Wt-sAir- Lin Elcc Wi:? V. .v,.r!n CA.V STOCK A I) iv 52 56 34 CmI X 's 22 4U'a I'mt Pk Cit I" S Riink 33. 8(i . C 77y4 56 B : 78 35 J r p. m. in J Ross. . 40 4f) .;; J )' ,v Co i Tr;:-v;:'ii- . Grim ; To S, jrrs ,nv S::i OU T . nncy ; : . Da . v .1 Ti-r- "ricni tv' 71 88 71 36 33 22 52 Mfc l!u- - -- 1 sv ; La Von Maurine Topham West Sts Rfg URANIUM STOCK 78 108 30 40 78 . v S'-- . .: '; K v. a T ,- v Chapel for Brad- - 1949. . 77 107 30 71 88 I Santaquin year-ol- d WEATHER FORECASTS Wool Men To Hear Talk AND TEMPERATURES j PRESS Tuesday By Senator Utah: clean partly Funeral services First LDS Ward Richard Charles Thomas, 70, died Sunday evening at his home 156 E. 2nd N. of a heart attack. He was born Feb. 20, 1887, in Selleck, Hereford, England, a son of Christopher and Maragret Ma ria Green Thomas. He was educated in England and joined the LDS Church in July 1910. On Aug. 9, 1909, he married Naomi Forward, in Wales, England. Their marriage was later in solemnized the Salt Lake -Old SANTAQUTN th'e SKIES TODAY 3-Year- will be held Tuesday at of 68 N. in 7th the tree by her front window. Member of New York Stock Exchange DOW JONES AVERAGES" 30 Total Volume Industrials Yesterday's Close 444.091.14 2,200,000 For a HOGLE AND COMPANY A- - Intermountain Briefs Tuesday Rites Set Anybody Lost Heart Attack A Pet Crow? At Home Has anybody lost pet crow? Mrs. E. J. Mower Claims Man E., Provo, found one Stock Market FURNISHED BY J. Tfiomas RlcKarff I Phone: FRanklin OTHfft NATIONAL OfrlCSS MUIRAY OOOEN SAtT tAJCI 73 I I CITY . w - .! ItlCTIIC J 3rd Soath & University Ave. 'PRQVO FR 50 266 West Main American Fork tt?i Street Ph. 980 |