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Show SEPTEMBER 28, SUNDAY, A 1958 Harold P. Miner SUNDAY HERALD 1 T , Utah County, Utah Funeral services for Anna NelMon- son Zobell, 58, will be held day at 1 p. m. in tve LsV. W a LDS Chapel. Mrs. r Zo- hi night Nephi wh ere d she and her had been living while the hjus-ban- dent's chair. Friends may call '.today from ivis. Zobeii 3 to5 p. m. at the Anderson Funeral Home in Nephi.' From 7 to ;9 pm. tonight and Monday prjtor to Vservices they may call at the Francis Camara residence, her daughter's home, on Sandhill -- Park. , . Surviving in addition to her husband and two children, Mrs. Fraircis Camara 'and Clarence O. Zobell, listed Friday, are , eight grandchildren and the following brothers and sisters: Clara Beag-leSpanish Fork; yie Oster-gaarRhoda Mitchell, Magna; Jessie Blevins, Yuma; C. Scott Nelson, Menan, Clark Nelson, Lehi, and Ida:; W. Charles Nelson, Maywood, Calif. Ariz.; heating -- I Friday. Lorraine Rae d year-oldaughter of Tareapont, and Carrie Thompson Ray pont, died Wednesday; funeral WHTTEROCKS Monday, '10 a. m., Whiterocks Episcopal Church. It VERNAL Brent Shiflett. infant 'son, of Louis and Tonna Akelund Shiflett. died Wednesday: grave side services Saturday 11 a. m., - e 1VTmnrial Park Pmptprv. HOLLADAY George W. Glait-tli- ,; Camille 4215 St. (2415 East,' died Wednesday; funeral Saturday , noon, Holladay Fifth .'IDS Ward chapel, .T flATV William TIanr al Taylor.V 82, died Thursday; 1 Mondayp. ra.. Castle 1914. t' A ST CfTT fu-ner- Gate LDS Ward chapel. Freeway Hearing (Continued from Page Three) district of the city, was opposedv with citizens and businessmen of Payson favoring the idea of keeping the highway straight. This would bring it parallel to the 13. and R. G. W. tracks and hot put certain business .interests in the alrea between the highway and the 'railroad, Mr Jones declared. Favorable comment wasl also :heard from IS. N.' Cornwall, attorney for the D & RGW railroad and from a representative of Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe Com- -' pany. Mr. Cornwall requested, however, that careful considera- tion be given to his company's right of way interests and allowance for future commercial development of adjacent land be ' . r, made. Hurricane Blasts in- Speaking agricultural terests of the area, Mr. J. Blame Swenson,' resident of Spanish ana past; president oi tne jj or Utah Farm Bureau, made an urgent plea for all possible caution in the safeguarding of valuable farmlands. Most.of the right of way for the new. highway,; he 4 said, would traverse farmland, and all care should be taken to prpjtect each farm unit. Ideally, he stated, the .highway should traverse poor farmground o r ground entirely unsuitable for (Continued from Page One) . Juan, Puerto Rico. It was moving lowara tne north - northwest at eight miles an hour. No land area was in the immediate path of the storm.. Helene created a fair amount of daonage on the. South Carolina coast where it originally was pinpointed to strike. But winds never, got over 50 miles an hour ; on the mainland . until the blast hit in North Carolina. The South Carolina damage was mostly to, fishing piers ' and to one drawbridge that was jammed ' but of course this is ' cultivation, not always feasible. . Melvin J. Atwood, a farmer open. and resident of Inland, also, ventured a suggested change in the route between Spanish Fork and Payson based on use of a section of the 'old Payson Road" and the possibility of avoiding work in connection with irrigation (fitches in the area, Mr. Armstrong promised on lf of the road commission that a careful investigation of all these matters would be made and a be-Ha- v. de-'cisi- on' announced as soon as " sible. ?- pos- - . ' - . OPERA BEAD HONORED NEW YORK (UPI) Rudolf ZizZ, general manager of the JLIrtropolitan Operi Company, was d5orated Wednesday with the Cnmander'i Cross of the Order cl vVMerlt of the Federal Republic Germany, - - , . . ; ; ; foif ; : . . ' . He later married Stejla Hoffman in Magna, who survives him. In addition . to his widow, he is survived by the following children r J. Frampton Collin's, Orem; Don Collins, Spokane, William ' Collins, San Wash.; Pedro, Calif.; Mrs. Ray (Beulah) Collins Bowden, Magna; Mr s, Leonard (LeMira) Collins. Head man, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Mae Collins Iverson, Salt Lake ;City.? Funeral services will oe held at 12 noon Tuesday in the Salt .Lake Twenty-Sixt- h Ward Chapel, Ninth West and Seventh South. Friends may call Monday from 6 to 8 p,m., at the Deseret Mcr- tuary in Salt Lake City, 36 E 7th- - S., and at the Twenty-Sixt- h Ward Chapel 15 minutes prior to services 'on Tuesday. Burial will be in the Provo- - City Cemetery. f ,' . . One death was reported in the southeastern North Carolina tarea, attributed indirectly to the hurricane. This was a traffic death on a highway slickened by torrential ' ;: rains. ,. Helene, which had aimed its center Friday, night at the Charleston area on the South Carolina coast, swung northward during the ' ". nigh and early Saturday.1 i Mountainous seas, with waves 15 feet high, were reported at the CoasJ Guard station on Oak Is land, off Southport. Authorities including Gov. Luth-- ! er H. . Hodges broadcast appeals to citizens to remain calm and to stay indoors. Coastal residents had plenty of advise 'warning and thousands streamed inland.. Some few had to be warned they would be forcibly " moved to safety. . . .. - : . beaf-the-clo- ck k Requiem Mass for Mary Mason Sept..2lNat a local hospital will be held Monday at 9:30 a. m. at St. Francis Catholic Church. Father Lionel Morbney. v jr. m., wui conauct the mass. Interment will be in Prove Cemetery, under the, direction of Berg Mortuary. . 83, who died San-taqu- in . G.M.y Union (Continued from Page tXne) ' Provo Man Joans Aug. 4, 1900, at ..05i2 .95 .0334 .12 Santaquin, the .051, of daughter Charles and Cla J22 rissa Openshaw .10 Pfizer Laboratories ers doing "the same Jobs in different parts of the country, failure ofr the company to provide a full week's employment for some of its Workers, and a means of providing supplemental unemployment benefits to workers in Ohio and Indiana, where SUB payments are now illegal. The' UAW chief said GM was the worst offender in the matters of wage inequities and short work weeks and it was the most involved in the SUB payments iq Indiana and Ohio because it had more plants in those states. Hilton R. Mrs. Hone , has Joined Terry of Provo, Utah Ffizer Laboratories,- di.08 Her education was vision of Chas. SiYt Higginson. Pfizer & Co., Inc., ...... .04 received in the schools of that as a ......... .40 veterinary sales representacommunity. ,02 i tive, .15 She was a member of the LDS In his work with . Pfizer, Mr. 1.10 Church. She was married to Ever1.10 will be responsible for .01 Ya ett W, Hone at Provo on June 30, Terry ; bringing information concerning .0212 1921. '' r: ,. Park Nelson .... .11 .0912 the services and ani.07 Park City Con .0712 are her husband, four mal company's Surviving health research discoveries 03 O414 Prosper sons, Bert and DonlHone, Benja- to veterinarians. J25 .32 Silver King West , .01 .01 Silver Shield ... min; Charles Ray Hone, Salem, So Standard . . . .16 .20 and John E. Hone, Payson; four New York State is the nation's Swansea Con .I912 ' 0 .3lt Mrs. Robert (Alice) Tar Baby .29 daughters, largest producer of cabbage for v.70 Tintic Standard .721j Whiteman, American Fork; Mrs. .65 making sauerkraut. Utah Wyoming .7212 West Toledo .08 10 Coy; (Betty) Jewkes, Ferron; Mrs. (Continued from Page One) 14 W Williston .15 Don (Clara) Dedrickson, Spanish Zuma . .03 .0312 Fork; and Mrs. Robert (Virginia) en opposing positions and make ' SALES f To Show settlement more difficult, Bullion Mon, 1000 at 20 NuttalC Provo, and ' twenty-on- e You Comb Met. 2000 at 5 V that a of conference Suggestions grandchildren. fiSSsS Croff Oil, 1000 at 5 Really Also surviving are three brothers, foreign ministers should be called Dragon, 100 at 92 ya: 100 at 95 E Standard. 1200 at 3fe; 5000 at LeGrande and George Higginson, to deal with the China problem 3V4 both of Santaquin, and Charles Hig- if the Warsaw talks bog down Eur Standard, 1000 at 20 SEND FLOWERS Leonora, 5000 at 1 found little open favor among the ginson, Venisha, Calif. Moscow, 4000 at 1 Funeral services will be held big powers. The smaller nations' North Lily, 400 at 1.05; 200 at 1.10 Park City Con, 1000 at 72 They Say So Much! Tuesday at 1 p. m. in the Benja- representatives doubted the desiraSI Shield, 1000 at Wa at 18; min Ward Chapel; with Bishop Don bility of such a meeting. Swansea, 10QO at 19ai 1500 ' -- DIAL AC 1500 at 20; 2000 at 18 x Wride officiating. Friends may call -' Tar Baby, 2000 at 31 ' at the Claudin-Lind- e in Benjamin Tuesday prior to serTintic Cent, 10,000 at 2i Rohbock Sons Floral OT1UTX3000 at 3; 4000 at 2V2I in Spanish Fork MondayMortuary 'peanr between vices. will Burial be in the Benja1500 Tintic Std. at 70 1042 SOUTH STATE, OREM 7 and 9 p. m. or at the family home min Transunioh, 3000 at' 23,4. Cemetery. - ...... ; , , , Time Vital . , ; . i . Typhoon Japan (Continued from Page One) ' NEPHI Mrs. May T. Ingram, 69, died in Denver,' Colo., Sept. 25 of a heart, ailment. Mrs. 'Ingram was, until last month, a resident of Nephi and her home is still here in Nephi. In August she buried her husband John S. Ingram and has been living since then with her sister, Viola Sorral, in Denver, at whose home she . passed away. She was born May Tuttle, in Denver, Colo. She married tTohn S. Ingram, in Gallup, New Mexico in 1929. They resided in Nephi for the past eight years. She is survived by two sisters, and - two step children, Jack Ingram of Riverside, Calif.,- and Mrs. Dorothy Blake of Colton, Calif. Her husband was buried in Nephi, but, because of a special request of hers that her body not be shfpped or moved after she died, she will be buried, in Denver, well-know- 4100 Camille hi Woman Succumbs r Vikf-n- al 56, Ex-Nep- - 7945 West, died - In Denver n :. 2128 S. State. , MAGNA .Mrs. Edith Bertha 66, 3146 S. Dangrerfield, Armitage . The Daily Herald. Mr Collins, a sheet metal and enventilating gineer, was a long - time resi- - , &ir. Coliins dent of Salt Lake City, but he was born in Provo and grew to manhood here. , His residence in Salt Lake City was at :969 W. 7th S. He was born Dec. 25, 1885, in Provo. He lived here until he was grown when he moved to Magna, and from there to Salt Lake City, where he had lived for about 40 years. ' He was a specialist in sheet this type metal work, working-ihis life. of most of construction He served his apprenticeship in the J trade under the- late Henry Blumenthai, one of Provo's pioneer builders in this line of work. Mr. Collins was a member of the LDS Church and held the office of High Priest at the thhe of his death. He served as a counselor in the bishopric of the LDS Salt Lake Twenty-Sixt- h most of his lived Ward,rwhere-hhad He Lake Salt in City. years also been a stake ward teaching supervisor, and had held - other positions in the ' church organization. In his young manhood in Proyo n as a baseball he was on the .city team player, playing, xf that time.. . ' He married Emily Frampton in Provo, and they made their home in Provo. She died Jan. 11,1 SALT LAKE CTTY William M. Mclntire, 74,, 40 E. Malvern Ave. (2625 South), died Thursday; fu neral Monday at 10 a. m. at 36 E. frtfa South. Georfce W. Rankin, 76, 921 jW. 3rd South, died Thursday; funeral Monday noon,. 260 E. outh Temple. Bertha A. W. Carr, 763 Wall St. (150 West), died funeral Saturday Wednesday; C noon. Edith Jefferies, 79 485 Bryan Ave. ,(1553 South), died Thursday, Grace F. Spalding, 59,. 1575 E. 9th South, died Thurs-lay. John J. Miller, 38, died Tuesday; funeral Saturday 2 p. m., - LDS Ward Springville Third-Nint- h chapel with Bishop Clair Jensen of the Ninth Ward officiating. Friends may call at the Wheeler Mortuary tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. and Monday prior to services. Military rites , will be conducted at the Springville Evergreen Cemetery by the Springville American Legion Post No. 28.' n-ag- er Utah Obituaries ' Funeral services will be conr ducted Monday at 1 p. m. in the s, of TOKYO , their home in Eureka. He served in the Navy during World War II. Following his release from service he attended BYU. He was a member of he Independent Order of Odd Fellows Lodge in Tooele and the Olive Branch of Rebecca Lodge. He was past deputy grand master in IOOF. Mr. Dalton was a member of the American Legion Post No. 34, Delta, Utah. He was a member of the LDS Church. He is survived by his wife and one son, LeRoy Dalton, Los Angeles, Calif. ; two bothers, Jack Daltpnf Ogden, and Reed Dalton, no address, and one sister. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at i p. m., in the Eureka LDS Ward Chapel, Bishop Lee Bird officiating. Friends may call at Berg Mortuary in Provo Mon day from 6 to 8 p. m. and at the LDS Chapel in Eureka prior to services. interment will be in Provo City Cemetery, where full military , rites will be accorded him by the Dean E. Mendenhall Provo Post No. 13 of the Amer ican Legion. Mass Set Requiem J J P. ror viarvwiason L : resided enzo,. Calif. 1 d, Benjamin Lady Dies; Services Slated Tuesday (UPI) Northwest Orient' Airlines launches, a program Sunday, enablFurnished by J. A Hogle & ' ing passengers tor. arrive in the Co Member, New Yori Stock United States six rninutes before Exchange, 35 N. University BENJAMIN Verge Higginson Ave. leave Japan according to Hone, 58, died at her home here they the clock. Friday afternoon, of a heart at Travelers will leave Tokyo at SALT LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE 7 p.m. and reach Seattle at 6:54 She tack. was Bid Asked Yesterdays Close: a native of Banner p.m. the same day under a sched9.75 105 Bristol Silver .16 .18 ule effective Sept. ?8. Actual flyand had Bullion Morarch . . .19 .20 time for the trip will be 16 a Cardiff ing 1.35 ' .... Benja1.40 been Central Standard . . . .02 y2 hours .03a and 54 minutes, an airline for min resident 5 Chief Con .48 lifemost of her spokesman said. .21 .24 Clayton Silver .... Combined Metals ... . .C5a' .06 ' time. .04 5 Comstock .05 She was born Cons ' Eureka .30 .28 .05 Croff . ... .92 2 Dragon ..... ... ... East Standard .03 ia East Utah .11 Eureka Bullion .... .04V2 Eureka Lilly Con .. ' .0814 .20 Eureka Standard ... .07 Gt Western Kennebec 48. has .04 Majestic Oil .32 Mammoth since. .01 Y2 Mtn States Dev .... On April 20, .... 1.00 .12 Naildriver i New Park 1936, he mar- North Lily . . . 1.05 Mr. Dalton r i e d Mathina North Standard .0034 ' .02 Johnson in Provo. Tfiey made Park Konold - A. June Collins, 72, former, resident of Provo; died, suddenly at the' home of his daughter in Magna Friday evening. . Death was believed to be from a heart attack. He was the father of J. Frampton Col-liaretail advertising m a y, Irindon; . Provoan Dies In Salt Lake. ' , Passengers Arrive Ahead of Departure . Dohavan Dalton, 46, Eureka died Saturday at 11 a. m. at the Veterans Hospital in Salt Laite Citj of a lingering illness. He was born Oct. 10, 1911, in Richfield, Utah, a son i of Isaac and Ada Huntsman Dalton. He moved to Mammoth as a boy, and later to Eu reka where he Min- Friy Father Of Road in Lake View. Burial will be in the Eastlawn Memorial Market Quotations Vet Hospital er, 40, died morning at the family home at 159 W. Center Street after a short illness. He was born March 17, 1918, at Lehi, son of Paul C. and Ethel Bunker Miner. He was a graduate of Springville High School and attended the BYU. He married Edith Teasdale Jan. 6, 1943, In tiie Salt Lake Temple. Mr. Miner was active in the LDS Church, holding the office of Seventy. He served a 2H year mission in Brazil, served as ward clerk, chairman of the Genealogy Society, and was also active in Cub Scouting. He was a veteran of World War II. At the time of his death, he was employed by .' the Sinclair Oil Co. widow his and are Surviving two children, Shirley and Rex Miner, o Springville. Also surviving are his father and stepmother, Mr. and Mrs, Paul C. Miner of Bakersfield, Calif., and sisters, Mrs. C. H. (Ina) Pitcher of Quebec, Canada, and Mrs. C. A. (Norma) Hartley Of San Lor- A. June Collins . P. SPRINGVILE-JIaro- ld Vice-Preside- nt uction c ' Verge H. Hone ; Assisting him as for the year' will be Mr. Bill Ruff of Springville, , Roy Bpyer was elected director to the state group, which office he has held before. 1 or "was onst'r work. Vw, d i bell died Thursin day latter Elected president of the Utah County Chapter of the Utah Automotive Trades Association at their annual ' meet jng in Provo was Neils Rasmussen of Provo, owner and manager of Ras' Auto Service. Mr. Rasmussen succeeds Richard Hundley, also of Provo, into that position from the vice presi- Donovan Dalton Eureka Man Succumbs in Springville Man Dies of Brief Illness Man Heads Proyo Rites Monday Utah Automotive Slated For Trades Group Anna Zobell T ; Little Rock (Continued from Page One) whether or not it could comply with a mandate from the Supreme in this country escaped serious dam age. One fatality was reported on a Japanese maid a U.S. base servant killed when a retaining wall at Camp Zama, outside . Tokyo, caved in' Follows Northerly Path The storm howled north across Japan after sowing death and de struction in the Tokyo area Sat urday. Reports of damage from 22 provinces, mentioned 19 ships sunk, Si bridges washed out and more than 1,200 landslides. The typhoon was the worst since the one that lashed Turoto in 1934, taking a toll of 2,700 lives. It lost much of its punch as it headed north. At latest reports the veloc ity of the winds at its "eye" was down to 65 m.p.h. less than tyforce. phoon Two sizable ships were caught in the waters lashed to fury by the typhoon., but so far as is known neither wa- - sunk. There was. no immediate ' word of the fate of a Japanese tanker reported adrift off the southwestern island r storm, and U.S. installations on-her- of Shikoku. Stormy Seas British freighter Eskcliffe, out of fuel and adrift in the path of the typhoon, Weathered the storm safely. Radio reports Saturday Said none of the 31 persons aboard had been hurt. Harbor authorities here dis patched a tug with a load of fuel for the freighter, and the Japanese . coast guard cutter Murot was standing by. In the midst of catastrophe, xoKyo residents seemed more shocked by storm damage to the Imperial Palace grounds than by 4he more deadly troubles reported , elsewhere. The 7,240-to- n Court," Clarence E. Southwest field secretary for the National Association For The Advancement of Colored People said. "The Supreme Court gave 'the Little Rock School Board such a mandate on Sept. 12. The election has demonstrated among other things that a significant segment of responsible citizens have at last the courage for what they believe to be legal and right. . Governor Faubus, who is recognized as the author of most of the mischief witnessed at Little Rock, during the past year, has once, again misled his people." Little Rock's four high schools have been closed' a month. They (Continued from Page One) are under Supreme Court orders to '; integrate .immediately, but not recommend any specif ic tax Faubus thinks his plan will legal- legislation but will present a study ly sidestep the order. indicating how much additional taxes of various types and amounts Court Unaffected could raise. As far as the Supreme Court The committee was told "around is concerned, the election has no '$12,500,000 would be raised either effect. It was essential to the doubling the present income Faubus plan in that he had to by or by increase the statetax rates make sure first that a majority wide sales tax by 1 per cent. did not' want the schools to re Glen R. Swenson, director of the open integrated. said plans State The final step in his plan is for and Building Board, an integfor the school board to lease the rated specifications state official building proschools to Little Rock Private gram will be ready to adverSchool Corporation and reopen tise soon after Jan. them as private' schools. Charles E. Peterson, Provo, Under a special law passed by chairman of the Legislative Auditthe legislature a month ago, the Committee, said ' appointment state will pay the tuition of more ing of a legislative auditor," Mont G, than 3,000 students who" would at- Kenney, will give the Legislature tend private schools. "one of its Jinest tools for exerNearly 400 high school students cising better judgment for making have given up and started attend- appropriations." ing schools- as far away from Little Rock as Los Angeles and by Monday, if - the school board ' Milwaukee, Wis. meets today and agrees to lease ., '! ; them. Injunction Sougnt School board attorneys had adThe Nationals Association For vised, however, that .any lease The Advancement of Colored must be f temporary because the People appealed to the 8th U. S. District Court of Appeals Friday constitutionality of using private and asked for a temporary . in- sohools to avoid integration ordjunction to keep the school board ers must be tested in court. from leasing the schools. The actions did not reach the. 4TH WEST PHARMACY appeals court clerk's office in 'IVAN. SORENSEN Registered Pharmacist St. Louis in time Saturday, howPRESCRIPTIONS ever, and Monday will bef the SICK ROOM SUPPLIES DRUG SUNDRIES , earliest the NAACP can get an Prompt Fre Delivery. Injunction. The schools might be opened Regularly Priced 269.95 2-PIE- LIVING ROOM SET CE Made with heavy sisal .padding plus coil spring; construction. Choose your favorite color and be assured of long lasting comfort . . . extra long service. 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