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Show FRIDAY. JUNE 20, Utah 1958 DAILY-HERAL- J. A. '" Provoan Dies In Salt Lake Stock Market FURNISHED BY SKIES TODAY Josephine J. Goodrich D Utah County. WEATHER FORECASTS AND TEMPERATURES HOGLE AND COMPANY Member of New York Stock Exchange' By United Press International . Utah: generally fair, through tomorrow except partly cloudy, aft- Josephine Johnson Goodrich, 84, of 328 W. 3rd N., died Thursday afternoon ata $ alt Lake Hospital DOW JONES AVERAGES causes incident to age. of 3013 20 Total t,. was born May;.22,1874, In She' Yesterday Close: UUUtle Rails Volume Industrials Stocks V a daughter of John and 78.41 .38! 162.611.83 Provo, 471.57 5.08 116.472.41 3.690,000 Johnson. She reSward Inger EXCHANGE SALT STOCK LAKE STOCKS ACTIVE ceived her schooling at the Lake jMOST COMPLETE VOL. CLOSE CH. Yesterday's Close: Bid Asked View schools and the BY Acad9 9.00 $8io UNCH Banner , Curtis Pub 32,000 emy. 1.'. .18 .17 i Bristol Silver Standard Pack 25.700 r On Oct, 31, 1894, she married .25 47 .23 Bullion Monarch . 25,500 'Chrysler 4Va! Cardiff 1.00 .90 63X Mohasco Inds William 39,000 Willis Goodrich in the ' Sperry- - Rand 37,300, .02 ' 19 V4 V4, Central Standard . .01 LDP Temple. He. died Salt Lake .50 .45 39 , Gen Motor Chief Con 33,800 V, -- ernoons.: Few scattered afternoon thunder showers, northern border area and extreme j southeast corner. Continued rarm. High both days 88 to 98. Low .tpnlghC 30 to 65. Fire weather: minimum thumidity 15 to 20 per cent, afternoon wind southwesterly 10 to 18 miles per hour. through Ogden: generally fair . i - .. -- - I ' ! 15-- V - -- v.. Std Oil N . . .24,700 535,k ' U S Steel J 64 Ve 24,500 10 Minute Maid 24,400 UNCH U S Tobacco 22,500 K, 284. YORK STOCK EXCHANGE :NEW : Yesterday Today' Close Open 77V3 77 vAflied Chem 23 23 y4 Allis Cham .... 27 27 Alum Ltd 48 48 Amer Can i Amer 43 43V2 Cyan . . . 12 12 i Amer Rad 44 45 Smelt Amr 177 V. 177 Amer Tel & Tel 86 85 Amer Tob 21 21 Atch T & S Fe 41 41 Beth Steel 63 63 Cater Trac .... 47 48 Chrysler ....... 43 43 Clark Equip . . s- - Corn Pd Rfg . 43 43 ! , " . J . . . . & R s. Denver, Dow Chem -- ! . Du Pont East Kod G -- '. . . . El Paso Firestone Ford Motor Gen Elec Gen Fds . Gen Mtr . 'Goodyear . Oil Gulf - . 38 55 183 109 33 87 , m"p tyA... y- 55 183 110 33 41 87 41 61 61 58 58 . " 39 IntrNick Int Paper ......... Johns Man ..... ... Kennecott .'Minn Mni MIz . 4,. - . 39 78 113 34 79 98 38 89 39 78 114 ..... ........ 31 35 24 31 38 88 29 26 89 29 26 50 5k Pac G & El Parke Da . J C Sc 'ProctPenney Gam 57 79 93 60 34 46 73 29 50 52 53 R C A Repub Steel Reyn Tob B Sears ? Socony .... ' Std Oil Cal , Std Oil N J . Texaco Co . " Timk R Bear Transamer . . Un Carbide . Un Pacific . Unit Air Lin Unit Pk City U S Steel . . L Utah P West Air Lin Wests Elec . Woolworth ! , 71 . .i , 19 I .09 .90 .80 .02 .02 .12 .05 .04 .15 .00 .15 .13 , .34 .04 1.00 .04 .10 .05 .08 V2 .22 .04 .33 .05 .35 .02 .12 .95 .82 .02 14 .O2V2 rl3 .05 .04 12 18 .01 .19 .16 .28 .70 .65 .09 .27 .67i2 .55 .07 .14 .03 West Toledo Williston .14 2.. Stocks Score Comeback NEW YORK Stocks (UPD . . . Asked ville. Autos improved fractionally, ap .69 .62 parently unaffected by ) continua 41.75 tion of the excise tax. American 43.75 16.12 Motors however, fell Vi. point to 10.75 12. on' heavy volume as it w is 2.87 28 62 learned Louis F. Wolson has sold I ........ .35 4.00 5.25 15.75 2.37 about i ........... narrowly . A -- ........... ....... Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Edna Petersen Howard, 73, mother of Mrs. D. M, (Faun) Bray of Orem, member of the advertising staff of The Daily Herald of . Provo, died at her home in Holladay Thursday at 11:45 a.m. Survivors besides Mrs Bray include her husband, Thomas A. Howard, whom she married Feb. 7, 1905, in Blackfoot, Ida., these sons and daughters, Joseph T., Holladay; Percy L., Salt Lake City; Lubern E., Sheep Ranch, Calif.; Cloyd F., Denver, and Jack S. and Mrs. Ira (Alice) Argyle, Bountiful; 21 grandchil dren; four and three brothers. Funeral services will be Mon day at 11 a.m. at Holladay Tenth LDS Ward, 2600 E. 4800 S. Friends may call at 36 E. 7th S.( Salt Lake City, Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m., and at the Joseph T. Howard residence Monday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Burial will be in the Elysian Burial Gardens. great-grandchildre- n, shares of American 100,000 Motors and plans to sell the remaining 300,000 shares that he and members of his immediate fam URANIUM STOCK QUOTATIONS, ' own. Bid Asked ilyOils Today's Quotations: showed gains of a point of 04 .05 Bapco . . . in more Shell and Amerada, Loril 05 .06 Big Horn .15 .18 Columex lard recovered nearly a point. .91 Federal U "W 87 Steels were mixed. Gold Cloud 06 .07 .02 .03 Chemicals Gunsight improved fractionally .11 Int Oil & Met .10. for the most part.' American Tele ; 2.25 2.50 Lisbon 337 362 phone regained 3A point of its loss Lucky Mc .03 Mt Peale .02 of nearly 2. .06 05 (Producers 1.25 - 1.35 Radorock .23 .28 'Shumway ' .32 .29 .Standard .04 .05 Sun Uran 48 .53 r White Canyon CHICAGO (UPD Wheat: .21 .23 Green Mtn . 01 .02 Uran Pete High Low Close i J. August Mother Of Herald Staff Member Dies . . ' son; . scored a sharp comeback in early dealings, today, recovering a good 13 13 portion of the. losses suffered Barium Steel . 11 10 Bunk Hill Thursday. 2 2 Day Mines Rails paced the move, respond 16 16 'Glad Mc B 124 125 Mtn Sts T & T ing to the surprise Senate action 1 New Park 2 2 voting to eliminate transportation Rico Argentine 5 5 Utah Id Sug excise taxes. Retention of other excise taxes, and assumption, that MUTUAL FUNDS Closing Quotations: Yesterday's transportation taxes, too, would re Bid Asked main, touched off the heavy sell f 6.25 6.75 Affil Fund ing Thursday, giving the market 12.65 13.68 Cdn Gen ' its sharpest break of the year. 16.30 17.64 Chemical 22.47 & H Bal Fund . 21.31 Rail gains in early trading ran 19 98 21.36 E Sc H Stk Fund to a point or so in Chesapeake 14 96 16.39 Fund Inv 8.10 & Ohio, Baltimore & Ohio, Rock 7.49 . Inc Inv 11.05 Mass Inv Growth 10.22 Island, Illinois Central, Atlantic 11.82 Mas Inv Trust . . 10.93 11.76 10.79 Coast Line, New, York Central and Telv & Elec to IVi points in Louisville & Nash OVER THE COUNTER . 23 grandchildren, 36 two brothers and two sisters, Alfred H. JohnUtah; n; Negro Leaders To Meet With Ike, Monday WASHINGTON (UPD Negro e 187-!8- 6 Ogden Livestock Livestock: Sheep 600; slaughter, spring lambs fully steady;- - around 300 head choice with prime end; 95 lb. rldaho " range spring lamb 23.25 with 85 lb. average 21.50; around 60 head shorn slaughter ewes mostly No. 2 pelts Cattle 50; only odds and ends mostly, holdovers offered early; no test of the market pn any class. Calves none nothing sold early. Hogs 50; butcher hogs fully 50 but 75 higher; sows nominally 'steady to strong; mixed lots U.S. 3 Barrows and gilts, 200 - 240 one Jot, 1 and 2 lbs. 187 lbs. 25.80; occasional grades, head sows OGDEN (UPD .1 . 5.50-7.0- 0. 1-- 24.75-25.5- 0; 17.00-18.0- 0. Produce Market tt (D-N.Y- New Diving Record Set " NLA .) (UPD 20-2- larger 3.90. Street sales: Idaho russets ' cluding U.S. extra 1, U.S.. 2A 3.25; few 3.50; bakers in- 4.25-5.0- 0; U.S. 1, 6.25-6:5Onions: supplies moderate; mand good; market firm to strong. 0. A DISH'S SIGNS "Puts ricsqaitocs Into A Tcilspin" Said Circle Plseer fieMs miner, 20 year go, in voting BUHACH as Scienct's 2nd greatest contribution . o Miners. Just enecnre uxiay. j u ( FR 3-30- 78 7 BmSur You Gt IT k . BUHACH tm Mm liocomlrsjl ANNUAL KIDS OUTING ' Games Fishinr Contest Prizes Fre Eats ; and Drinks! . SATURDAY 2 p.m. -J- UNE 21 All Sportsmen and Families' Welcome " SOUTH FORK 2 MILES EAST OF VIVIAN PARK anything, the tensions were growing daily. ' The execution of Hungary's revolutionary Premier Imre Nagy was the tip off to! Soviet major developments: The Soviet government Warned Japan on the danger of allowing U. S, nuclear weapons on its territory. The Soviets have refused to act under agreements and order the release of nine Americans held by East-- " Germany. Danes Accused The Soviets charged Denmark 'with "connivance" in the demony strations against the Soviet in Copenhagen following the Nagy execution. The Soviet Communist Party organ Pravda said President Eisenhower's tribute to Nagy was a ''pretext for new attemptis to break up a summit conference." The newspaper "Soviet Russia" hinted that Russia would send "volunteers" to Lebanon in the event of Western "intervention."Dispatches from Moscow reported that Khrushchev made a major address to the Communist Central Committee, but the emphasis in the dispatch was on agricultural problems and the election of two hew candidate members (probationary) to the Presidium. were Both' new ml e m b er-Nikolai "Khrushchev lieutenants N. Podgornyi, first secretary of the Ukrainian Communist Party, and Dmitri S. Poly anski, prime minister of thhe Russian Republic of the Soviet Union. j Art Contributor Dies in Hawaii ' SPRINGVI LLE 3 Springville art enthusiasts have, learned with sorrow of the death of Mrs. Alice Wilcox Steed, 70, who, with her husband, contributed a valuable East Briar Corless, 46, of Ave.,; who was killed instantly Thursday when his car missed a curve and overturned four and one half miles east of Rawlins, Wyo., on Highway 30, will be conducted Monday at 1 p.m. at the 1021 High art collection to Springville ;' School in 1950. . Mrs. Steed, wife of Merlin Steed, died Tuesday of last week in Hawaii, where she was vacationing with her husband. They had flown to the islands after attending general LDS conference in Salt Lake City. She was born March 1, 1888 in Farmington, and has been active in LDS Church work for a, number of years. Her husband served as director of HID Cumorah, N. Y. from 1952 to 1955 and was president of the Los Angeles temple Square Mission from 1955 to 1958. The art collection which they presented to Springville has been valued at a quarter of a million Aura C. Hatch Mortuary. 1911, call at the mortuary Sunday from and Monday prior to services. Burial will be in the Provo City Cemetery. 6 to 8 p.m., Confesses To Bank Robbery nia apparently persuaded a welder to turn himself over to Salt Lake police and ad mit robbing a Pasadena, Calif., bank of $3,000 last Friday. Joseph Earl Parcell of Bell, Calif., told police here Thursday night he wanted to turn himself in because he talked the matter over with his mother and sister by telephone and decided to "face, the music." Federal Bureau . of Investigation officers said Parcell was wanted in Pasadena for participating in a robbery with two other men. A Bank of America messenger .was robbed of $3,000 last Friday during a daylight stickup in downtown Pasadena. Parcell gave himself up to police in the Union Pacific railway station after his girl friend called the FBI from California. DROBNY SUSTAINS INJURY ; Drob-nLONDON (UPr-Jaros- 4av former Czech Davis Cup 6tar who won the 1954 Wimbledon sin- y, J A. Ray Corless, 46, VICTIM who was killed in an automobile accident Thursday, when his car missed a curve and overturned dollars. ' Surviving are her husband, eight sons . and daughters, 31 grandchildren and seven brothers and sisters. Funeral services were held at Glendale, Calif., where the Steeds had made their home for many years. near Rawlins, Wo. Gift Offer Revealed. By -- four-pow- Funeral services for Arthur Ray Mr. Corless was born Dec. 17, at Vernal, a son of Arthur P. and Elizabeth Preece Corless. He received his education in Vernal schools. On Nov. 8, 1930, he married Alberta Pickup in Vernal,. Before moving, to Provo in 1940, Mr. Corless engaged in livestock business, and followed construction work after coming to Provo. At the time of his death he was for the W. W. Clyde Construction Co. Mr. Corless was a member of the LDS Church. Surviving are his wife, two sons, Clifford and Clark Corless, three daughters, Mrs. LaJean Stark, San Diego, Calif.; Merlene and Frances Lee Corless, both of Provo; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Corless, Vernal; and the following brothers and sisters, Mrs. Marie Lee and Mrs. Maurine Richins, Ronald and Howard Corless all of Vernal; Mrs. Betty Hair grow. Louisiana and six grandchildren. Bishop Archie Bowden of Oak Hills Second LD& Ward will officiate at the services. Friends may j Hagerty White WASHINGTON UPI) House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty acknowledged today that an exclusive Florida club insisted on treating - him to a free five day vacation stay earlier this V year. Hagerty. confirmed a report by the Tampa Tribune that the Ponta Vedra Club at Jacksonville Beach refused to let him pay a $260.91 bill for himself and his wife from Jan. 27 to Feb. 1. The presidential aide took exception with one item in the Tribune account. He said he paid hia own golf feer and for lessons from the club pro. Hagerty commented: "I did insist, as the account says, on paying my entire bill but the club would not let me do so. Under the circumstances, there was nothing wrong in this. I don't see how anyone could make anything of my being a guest of Hhe club at their insistence." Thj Tampa newspaper quoted J.P. Le Master, a club official, as saying the news secretary "insisted on paying his Nil but we wouldn't let him do it. "I thought we were very fortunate in having him here," Le Master added. h According to the Tribune, 12-d- . s ! I troublemaker. act Council has The Atlantic been trying to mediate the dispute through diplomatic channels, but sources in Paris said that its efforts have "failed utterly." In Athens, government sources said Greece intends to stand by its rejection of the plan "without Closing the ;door to further discussion." The. Macmillan plan has been rejected by both the Turks, who demand partition "of the island, ay Court building, Szenasi told western newsmen during today's session of Parliament. made The clemency appeal to law Hungarian according was turned down, he added-- . Under questioning, Szenasi said the trial "was held this year, not too long ago." Earlier, he parried the same question, saying facetiously that the trial took place "before the verdict was passed." He refused, however, to say exactly when the verdict was handed down or when the executions ; took place. Szenasi maintained that the trial was "not secret." He said it was "closed" for reasons of . "state interest' He said that had the trial been 4 public it probably would have Courson, assistant club man- been exploited by some western ager, said the Ponta Vedra never countries to slander and tell lies about Hungary. Boise Boston Butte 69 49 . ' 74 92 92 56 61 81 52 77 58 63 58 87 53 63 57 60 71 60 80 90 71 91 Omaha Phoeiiix 80 108 PocateUo Portland Provo 88 72 . . Salt Lake City San Francisco St. George St. Louis .24 .10 .09 .05 74 102 87 78 88 Logan Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Ogden .65 .19 42 63 53 44 62 54 69 74 Denver , Las Vegas Pep. . 1 .04 .15 .07 .01 . 99 81 75 88 Seattle Spokane 67 59 60 nex it. Attack IMew r, Continued from Page One) when Russia threatened to send in Russian "volunteers" to halt French and British attacks on Egypt. The Job outlined by the United Nations Security Council was for the U.N. to set up observation posts to check Lebanese complaints that neighboring Syria has poured men and arms into Lebanon to help rebel forces overthrow the government of President Camille Chamoun. Hammarskjold hoped to have 110 observers In place and working by next Monday although rebel sources have said they would not accept U.N. "interference" in what the opposition called a purely internal affair. Four Italian reconatesa'nee aircraft with six pilots and two radio technicians arrived Thursday to provide an aerial patrol oyer Lebanon's borders. Jt was understood Lebanon, also wanted set forces to patrol the coastline. The U.N. observers have set up where they imposts in Tripoli mediately came under fire from army and rebel riflemen shooting and in it out on the streets the area south of Baalbeck and in south Lebanon. . k an- I DEXTER WASHER FDIST REPAIRING FLIGHT First commercial flight of the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin, Germany to the United States, was made in 4 Vk days in 1928. DTR C0.v AISlMyKlCDKl A NEW r SHIRT i LAUNDRY SERVICE . See for yourself we launder and finish your husband's shirts 'Just the way be likes . them j We get them not Just white, but sparkling white. And we even sew on buttons. ' Phone before noon for your money later the same day! You select your own repayment THE NEW JOHNSTON plan! REEL TYPE MOWER ' I UP TO P2000 24 Ch Yo Co You Racaiv PoyaiMtf Rcfv S30US S1CC9 $S7MI 3S0.9S 20.00 7MJ2 457.1$ 2tC3 1054J4 Monrtvb 24 Monthly fay rrom 99.95 ctAYSori-Riaim- . 40.00 ' PET and GARDEN JSHOP 275 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. PHONE S3.C9 OTHER AMOUNTS IN PROPORTION FR WE PICK-U- P 3-42- 00 & DELIVER ' FINANCE COMPANY CLEANING up s Latest New Equipment Just Installed. S&C3 Easy Cutting-- Height Adjustment Easy Starting - An Outstanding Mower 230 Wsst Csnltr Strsst Z I " ; LOO AN MAONA . i gary's freedom Premier Imre senNagy and his tenced to death "for the 1956 uptried in Budapest rising ,wer "not to long ago," Hungarian State Prosecutor Geza Szenasi said today. All the defendants appealed for trial clemency during the in held Supreme and the GreeksJ who want to Budapest's May-hug- gles crown, may miss this year's bills its honored guests. tourney opener Monday because of a sprained ankle. Drobny, who makes bis home in Egypt susc tained the injury .Thursday in a doubles match at London's Queen's Club. j (Continued from) Page One) if necessary, to discuss its Cyprus plan with Greek Orthodox Archbishop Makarios, who has been excluded from the island as a Hun- (UPI) Em-.bass- British Push Reds Shed Little Light On Nagy Trial BUDAPEST, er Min. 82 67 68 88 61 Bismarck Chicago .,. Max. line. Atlanta' Within 48 hours there have been Billings these Mrs. Merlin Steed Rites Set for Provo Man Killed In Wyoming Crash . the-ne- 1 j , ot st ' ' A. Ray Corless I (Continued from Page One) summit possibility of East-Wetalks to ease world tensions. If 172,-830,0- 00, : Potatoes: Total U.S. shipments 686; arrivals 11; track 32. Supplies moderate; demand moderate; market steady. Track sales (100 lbs.): Idaho 5 russets per cent 10 oz. and CHICAGO Ntyricbort STORK WORKS OVERTIME The baby boom is still booming. U.S. births have set hew records for the past seven years, with last year producing 4,300,000 babies. So it's .not surprising that the population of the U.S. made a record jgain in 1957. As 1958 started, the total was for th second including armed forces overseas. This was an increase of three million a as showed on row. illustrated Newschart, gain, but not Every geographical division, year in a .states East measure. Central the .South the had of rate the Pacific The increase, in equal largest CoLife Insurance Data from the Metropolitan smallest. A SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Califorin to relatives call phone leaders meeting with President Eisenhower at the White. House posMarkets Monday likely will discuss-thinmore when of violence sibility schools this open fall, an tegrated informed source said today. 194 183 184- July Presumably they will ask the 187 186 Sept: President what he plans to do if 192-192 191 Dec. violence similar to that at Central 194 March 1947g 194 High School in ,Little Rock, Ark., 192 191 192 May last fall 'occurs again. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell late Thursday revealed plans for the conference. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty later confirmed it. Four Negro leaders were invited. Powell, who is under indictment for income tax evasion, was not among them.v Hagerty said the ONAGAWA, Japan, (UPD A meeting had been requested by French naval bathyscaphe set a Rev. Martin Luther King, new diving record for the Pacific the.. of the Montgomery, Ala. Ocean today. It reached a depth president Improvement Assn. of 9,480 feet. Powell said the meeting was ' The deep-se- a exploration craft "my idea." sent here by France as part of A source close to civil the International Geophysical matters told United Press rights Interyear program spent six hours un- national the Negro leaders also derwater Toff Japan's east coast, will press for a speed-u- p about 100 ' miles east of Senadai probably in government action in civil City in iorthern Honshu. The. old rights matters, specifically intenPacific record was 4,501 feet. sive by the new Professor Tadaoshi Sasaki of Civil investigations Commission and Justhe Tokyo Fishery University tice Rights Department prosecution in who made the dive to test the vote denial cases. flow of water below the 3,280-folevel, said he discovered that VARIOUS LEADS deep water thers flows at a Pencil leads are made in about speed of two centimeters a sec- 19 degrees of hardness. Toughond. est is a" lead that will take a The still water theory forms needle point, used by stone .cut the basis for the assumption by ters and engravers. the nuclear powers, including the United States, that radioactive UTAH VALLEY nuclear wastes .can safely be WILDLIFE FEDERATION dumped into the sea. Wheat World Communism tel. IncrMM 'During 1957 - great-grandchildre- ; . Utah-Idah- Surviving are one son. arid five daughters, Lynn Willis Goodrich, Mrs. Arthur D. (Maurine) Taylor, Mrs. Barbara Zabriskie, Mrs. Frank (Helen) Cole, all of Provo; Mrs. Frank R. (Zettella) Taylor, Raymond, Alberta, Canada; Mrs. Glen (Wilma) Miller, Farming-ton- , ' I They made their home in Draper until 1898, when they returned to Lake View. Mr. Goodrich was thex agricultural superintendent of o the Sugar Co., in Lake View. After her husband's death Mrs. Goodrich moved with her children to Provo. 1; 4. Western Alloy, 5,000 at ; j .03 AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Bid Asked Today's Quotations: Bid Today' Quotations: . . O & G .67 PinCy Big .57 English Oil 39.75 Equity Oil ; 41.50 First SecrBk Interstate Mtr L ..15.25 10 25 Lang Co '. 2.50 ILang Const 27.25 Mtn Fuel .30 Oil Sec 3.50 t Rare Metals 4.75 Three Sts Nat Gas lUtah Southn Oil . . 14.25 West. Sts Rfg .... 2.12 Nov. 18, 1918. Martin Teen) Clinger, all of Zuma Mrs. and Julia Hatton, Provo, . SALES: . Utah. Gunnison, Bristol Silver. 7.000 at 17. Funeral services will be held Bullion Mon, 500 at 23. Chief Cons 600 at 40; 1.000 at 42; Monday at 2 p. m. in the Berg 500 at 45. Drawing Room , Chapel, where Dragon. 200 at 97; 100 at 1.00. East Standard. 2,000 at 4. Verl G. Dixon of the Provo Third Maj Oil. 7.000 at 5. Ward ..will officiate. Friends may New Park, 500 at 95. North Lily. 200 at 82 . call at the mortuary Sunday from 65.000 6 North Standard. ' 1.000 at to 8 p. m. and Monday prior to at 2. Park Nelson. 8.000 at 12; 1.000 at services. Burial will be in the 13. Provo City Cemetery.,, Pros Oil Mng, 1,000 at Tar Baby. 1,000 at 24; 6,500 at 25; 1,000 at 26; 7,300 at 27. Unit Park City, 2.000 at 1.10; 400 Edna P. Howard at 1.00. 64 27 20 56 47 56 47 V .02i . 1 1 64 27 la . r .09 .04 .07 .18 .03 .32 .04 .25 . 41 41 08 .03V2 , 78 98 38 89 80 35 24 50 57 79 93 60 33 45 73 29 50 52 53 70 38 .22 .06 .20 .06 .06 .32 .04 .97 ; . 34 79 Monsan Chem Mont WarT Natl Dist Natl Steel Clayton Silver Combined Metals Comstock Cons Eureka . Croff Dragon ..... . . East Standard East Utah Eureka Bullion . Eureka Lilly Con Eureka Standard Gt. Western . . . Kennebec Majestic Oil Mammoth Mtn. States Dev. Naildriver. ...... New Park North Lily North Standard Park Konold .. . .. Park Nelson Park City Con . Prosper Silver King West Silver Shield . . So. Standard Swansea Con . . Tar Baby Tintic Standard Utah Wyoming . tomorrow except scattered iafterv noon cloudiness. Continued warm. toHigh both" days near 2. Low i night 62. Provo: generally fair through tomorrow except scattered afternoon cloudiness. Continued warm. High both days near 92. Low tonight 62. Fire weather: minimum humidity near 18 percent, afternoon wind southerly ip to 16 mph. Logan: 'generally fair through tomorrow except scattered afternoon cloudiness. Continued wa noon cloudiness. Continued warm. High today near 88 and tomorrow 86. Low tonight 55. Five - day forecast, Saturday through Wednesday, for Utah: recurring widely .scattered afternoon and evening thunder showers but no general precipitation. Temperatures continuing above Phons: FRanklln OTHEX NATIONAl OFFICE1 SAIT LAKE OTY OODEN MURRAY 3-62- COHPANY 73 TOOELl 110 North University Avenust ; Prov |