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Show Herald Sunday ' Sarah E. Sunday, JanuaryUtahb, "h Utah County, - Adamson Of Utah County Dies Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth 76, Twin Falls, Ida., died Adam-so- n, Friday at 10:30 at her residence in Twin Falls, following a lin gering illness. She was born June 23, in Lehi, a daughter o f Lyman Benjamin and Sarah Ann Mnnnc ,v.- 1 " A Willis. I She married A r thur C. Adam- - Mrs. Adamson son Sept. 25, 1907 in the Salt Lake LDS Tem ple. The couple made their first home in American Fork, later moved to Provo where they raised a family of six children They moved to Twin Falls in 1937 and since then had made their home in that area. Surviving are her husband, Twin Falls; three sons and three daughters, Arthur W. (Art) Adamson, Provo; Clifford C. Adamson, Nampa, Ida.; Roy B. Adamson, Orem; Mrs. O. E. Pederson, Tule Lake, Calif.; Mrs. Robert (Velm; ) Warberg, Twin Falls, Ida.; Mrs. Russell (Joyce) Wells, Twin Falls, Ida.; 15 grandchildren and eight dren: four brothers and two sisters, Stephen Willis, Lehi; Ren L. Willis, DuBois, Ida.; (Eva) ?reat-grandchi- l- William Milwaukee, Willis, Wis.; Hyde Willis, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Myrtle Dailey, Pro vo; and Mrs. David (kva) Wangsgard, Ogden. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary Tuesday from 2 to 2:50 p.m. Graveside services and interment will be in the Provo City Cemetery at 3 p.m Utah Obituaries Carl H. SALT LAKE CITY 69, 1296 W. 4th S., died Gayler, Thursday. William Grant 59. 621 S. Blake-le- y. West Temple, Wednesday. Samuel 2891 Del 48, F. O'Kelley, (Sam) died sa Dr., Friday. Clyde Wil liam Berger, 82, 265 E. 3rd S., died Friday; funeral Monday, 11 a.m., 574 E. 1st S. Mrs. Lydia Munson Odbert, 82, 1392 Can terbury Dr., died Friday. Funeral for BOUNTIFUL Miller Elizabeth Faddis, 91, who died Wednesday were Satur day. MURRAY Elmo (Pete) Smith Evans, 55, former Murray resident, died Thursday in Los Angeles, Calif. Frederick William OGDEN Staffers, 92, died Friday; funeral Monday, 1:30 p. m., Chape of Flowers Mortuary. Public Masonic funeral was Saturday for George Stokes, 75, who died Wednesday. Graveside ser LAYTON vices were Saturday for Con nie Lea Neale, infant daughter of Delbert R. and Frances Les lie Neale, who died Wednesday. VERNAL Jay Lee and Jay Don Witt, twin infant sons o: James C. and Edna Buehlar Witt, died Friday; graveside services, Monday, 10 a.m., Vernal Memorial Park Cemetery Mrs. Mad-re- d CASTLEDALE W. Moffitt, 72, died Friday; funeral Monday, 1 p.m., Castledale LDS Ward Chapel. REDMOND Clifford Peter Mickelsen ,44, died Friday; funeral Monday, 1 p.m., Redmond LDS Ward Chapel. MORONI Claudia Ramsay, died Thursday; funeral, 16, Monday, 1 p.m., Moroni East-We- st Ward Chapel. PORTAGE Isaac P. Roderick, 74, died Thursday; funeral was Saturday. died MAGNA Mary Feather-ston- e Doran, 75, former Magna resident, died Thursday in Fremont, Calif.; funeral Monday, 2:30 p.m., 4760 S. State St. SANDY Patrick Schraven Gilley, 45, 1326 E. 8600 S. died Thursday. - CHIEF GETS TICKET two-and-a-h- alf LBJ - Former Coal Dealer Dies Davids Ward, 83, Nephi the last two years, died Friday at 5 p.m. in the Juab County Hospital from pneumon ia. She was born June 19, 1881, in New York City to William H. and Mary Minor Winrow. bne married Coles Albert Davids in 1902 in Greenport, N.Y. In 1931 she marred Gilbert Ward in New York City. He died in 1952. She has lived in Nephi tne last two years with a granddaughter, Mrs. Duane (Jayce) Bracken. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Charles Huber of Ogden; grandchildren, Mrs. Braken of Nephi, Walter Ross-ma- n of Sunnyvale, Calif., and Frances Huber on an LDS mis sion in West Germany; and a sister in New York. Funeral services will be Mon day at 1 p.m. in the Nephi Fourth LDS Ward Chapel with Bishop Donald L. Bailey offici ating. Friends may call today from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Anderson Funeral Home and Monday prior to services at the chapel. Burial will be in Vine Bluff Cemetery at Nephi. age. He was born FX' h mi tu I hiiiim it! :' Dr. R.F. Campbell, director ot the Midwest Administrati o n Centeir at the University of Chi cago, has been named as a consultant by Gov. George Clyde'svSchool Study Commit; tee. He met with the group Fri day and anothej meeting was slated for Monday. G. Kenneth Handley committee chairman, said Campb ell would examine the committee's study outlines and comment on them. Campbell is a graduate of Brigham Young University and has a doctorate from Stanford. He is one of the nation's foremost experts on school administration. 4""V 438-ac- re ranch Saturday. Press James 1951. He was a member of the LDS Church, holding the office of high priest at the time of his death. Mr. Knight served as Texan Receives Brother's Kidney, Both Doing Well S. NuDENVER (UPI)-J- ose nez, 37, an El Paso, Tex., truck driver, received a kidney Saturday from his brother in a del- icate, transplant operation at Colorado General Hos pital. Nunez, and his brother Fernando Nunez, 27, of Juarez, Mexico, were both reported in good condition shortly after the surgery. The transplant was the 52nd performed in Denver by a famed team of surgeons. six-ho- ur ward clerk, ward chorister, superintendent of the Sunday School, the YMMIA, and as high A spokesman for the hospital priest group leader. He was ac tive in music circles and play said that Nunez had suffered Leona Clark Tidwell ed the violin in his younger kidney failure as a result of yearg. He was a member of the chronic uremia. Several Nunez Kiwanis Club until his retire brothers were checked before it Dies ment from business. was determined that Fernando and two sons are was an acceptable donor. Surviving five daughters, Leo K. Knight, Jose speaks only Spanish. He Veil La Orem; Knight, Myron was born in Mexico. A sister-in-laLeona Clark Mower Tidwell, F. Charles Mrs. Bountiful; has acted as an interpre63, wife of W. Q. Tidwell and Salt Lake ter. (Norma) Thompson, mother of five Utah County City; Mrs. Paul J. (Myrtle) residents, died Saturday morn Henrichsen, Mrs. Harold B. ing en route (Fay) Jones, and Mrs. David to the hospi- R. (Colleen) Dinsdale, all of tal after suf Provo; Mrs. Lawrence W. fering a heart (Reva) Lynn, Springville; 27 Truck-Trai- n attack at the grandchildren and nine greathome of a grandchildren; three brothers daughter i n and one sister, Alfred N. Knight Orem. For the and Mrs. Walter C. (Maud) ycai, uic Brown, both of Burley, Ida.; Two Idaho men escaped with had Frank D. Knight, Santa Susana, minor bruises Oyttai malrintT Saturday about Calif.; and Ralph W. Knight, 2 a when Denver and Rio p.m. Mrs. Tidwell their home Genola. train Grande the front. grazed in Mt. Pleasant. Funeral services will be held of on their the Heber truck Mrs. Tidwell was born Feb. Tuesday at noon in the Berg branch tracks at Third South 21, 1900 in Fairview, a daughter Drawine Room Chapel with and Second West. of Hans Waldemar and Lona Bishop Arnold N. Davis of the the westbound Driver of told Poulson Clark. She received her Provo First Ward officiating. morwho at truck, the call police he education in the schools of Fair-vie- Friends may in "couldn't 8 6 time," was and in 1918 was married tuary Monday from to p.m. Lewis W. stop Smith, 20, Franklin, to Clarence Mower. They were and Tuesday prior to services. A Ida. with him was in the be Provo will passenger later divorced. She was Interment Leon Priestly, 25, also of married to W. Q. Tidwell on City Cemetery. Franklin. June 18, 1945 in the Salt Lake Of Mother Heart Attack Campbell to Aid Clyde's School Study Committes SALT LAKE CITY (UPu in Orem, a Secretary Pierre Salinger and son of Newell friends accompanied him. and They looked at Johnson's Eliza Stratton whitefaced Herfords and he He showed them over points of Knight. Adel-1 interest married such as his boyhood e e n Farley home and the school he went to. RAIL DISASTER IN YUGOSLAVIA Passenger cars rest on wreckage-strew- n embankment following collision at a suburban station eight miles south of Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Sixty-tw- o persons were killed in the passenger train collision. (Herald-UP- I Radiotelephoto) 64 Killed in Yugoslavia Train Collision and a few minutes later I Witnesses standing in the ice- found myself lying in an ambu- covered station said the impact he said. lance," sent and us "The jolt sent bodies and luggage hurtlflying earthtumbling. It was like an ing through the air. A. James Pipkin Milan Manojlovic, engineer quake," survivor Danilo Tadic told reporters. "I had been Dead of the second train said: "I 69 Saturday to find saw a red light as I rounded sleeping and woke up i A. i k P of James 69, n, p a curve. But it was too alte. myself hitting my head on the Apartments, Provo, I could not stop." other side of the car. Fortun Startup died Saturday afternoon in Utah Police investigators "detainately my coat was hanging Valley Hospital. ed" the engineer along with there. Funeral arrangements are two other railroad workers who "The coach was splintered pending at the Berg Mortuary. were at the switch controls. ARE YOU A FREETHINKER? (Continued from Page One) ... Are you for FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM If to OF SPEECH OF THE PRESS OF THOUGHT OF RELIGION FROM RELIGION fed THE at LIBERAL Monthly Publication of FRIENDSHIP LIBERAL LEAGUI (Inc. 1885) 5233 North 5th St., Box f, Phila. 20, Pa. Subscription 6 months, $1 One Year, $2 Send for free sample copy today. sssrs ft- JANUARY Two Unhurt OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY Till 9 P.M. r. hltB' (GrOOC In Crash X v w, LDS Temple. Mrs. Tidwell had lived in Provo, Santaquin, and Nephi before moving to Mt. Pleasant. She was active in the LDS Church, having worked in the MIA, Relief Society and Sunday School. She had also done considerable genealogy work. Surviving are her husband, nine sons and daughters, Eugene Mower and Mrs. L. L. (Connie) Orr of Springville; Mrs. J. L. (LaRue) Wiley and Mrs. B. E. (Beth) Johnson of Orem; Mrs. A. R. (Neatha) Greener of Helper; Donald L. Mower of American Fork; William E. Mower of Kemmer-er- , Wyo.; Mrs. Gary (Janice) Frandsen of Midvale; and Mrs. Gary (Diane) Goelz of Lawton, Oklahoma; and two step - daughters, Mrs. J. B. (Donna) Hobbs of Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Marlin (Joan) Lloyd of Sandy. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Mt. Pleasant Third LDS Ward. Friends may call at the Jacobs Mortuary in Mt. Pleasant day from 7 to 9 Mon- p.m. or Tuesday prior to services. Interment will be at Sunset Lawn Cemetery in bait Lake City. Funeral Services Held 43ec. 23 For J. J. Hickey DENVER Funeral services for Jack J. Hickey, about 73, a former resident of the Provo area, were held Dec. 23, 1963, in Pueblo, Colo. He died in Denver on Dec. 19. Burial was. in Pueblo. Mr. Hickey had been an employee for the Union Pacific Railroad and for a number of years worked as a clerk in the railroad's Geneva office. A native of Colorado, he had many friends in the Provo area. Crush of (Continued from Page One) fixion and resurrection nearly 2,000 years ago. The swirling, shouting, shoving throng of tens of thousands wanted to see, hear or touch the spiritual leader of the world's Roman Catholics as he made his way through the twisting streets of this walled holy city. After a 3 hour flight from Rome to Amman, Pope Paul crossed the waters of the Jordan and entered Jerusalem, riding and walking over palm leaves and tapestried rugs that had been strewn in his path. As he left the Vatican for the first trip ever made by a Pope to the Holy Land, the Pontiff said he was going as a symbol of "the aspirations, the anxieties, the sufferings of the sick, the poor, the disinherited, the -- afflicted." He planned to visit the sacred shrines of Christendom, to pray for peace, and to meet with the head of the Eastern Orthodox Church in the quest for Christian unity. Across the barbed wire and barricades in another section of Jerusalem lay the Jewish State of Israel, with which Jordan technically is still an official state of war. The most stringent security measures since tne raiesiine war divided Jerusalem between Arab and Jew 16 years ago failed to stem the exuberance of tens of thousands and at times endangered the Pope. All wanted to see and touch the spiritual leader of the world's half billion Roman 1 1 1 " Catholics. With difficulty, the Pontiff managed to make the "stations of the cross" commemorating the agony of Christ on his way along the Via Dolorosa to crucifixion almost 2,000 years ago. fashioned especially for HER! . . Cut Flowers Cortag W.ddinfl Potted Plants Provo Flora! :mm mm mmm 201 Wsst 1st South Provo, FR Froo Delivery 01 Last Delivery 4 p.m. at Our Wonderfully Look mll If w Is Low Prices on A iiu. ii iy Provo police listed $400 damage to the truck and negligible to the trair. Opening in White Cotton Muslin Sheets v irst quality : woven 1Z8 threads per sq. in. for longer wear. Sanforized fit- ted bottoms have Elasto-F- it corners. (Continued from Page One) ment just before crossing to visit her brother. Waltraud Mickley, 32, said he Twin, fitted style 42x36-in- officials hoped West Berlin would be careful in any negotiations. He was going to visit his sister in East Berlin. "I am looking forward to new agreements to keep the wall open", he ,said. "But Berlin should not sell herself down the river in the process." . Pillowcases 1.44 Twin y 2 for 76c Flat Full, fitted, 1.66 Full, flat style 1.66 White Cotton Percale Sheets So luxurious First quality sheets bottoms have Elastio-Fi- t corners. . 1.74 Twin, fitted style ! 74 woven 180 threads per sq. in. Fitted -- Negro Boy Full, (Continued from Page One) riiiun(,uc rAAtfw-in. JL TOT r I tX U flat style, 1.94 ri Full, fitted, 1.94 NO DOWN PAYMENT to federalize the Alabama Na tional Guard to enforce the de- No Down Payment on Sears Easy segregation. It took Franklin a little less than one hour to complete the registration process in the li brary building. He emerged with two white students, and the same six state troopers who checked his credentials on the way in again checked them Payment Plan on the way out. Franklin then walked on a- head while the two white stu- Hpnts also showed their ID cards to the troopers. m Waveli-n- BERG"' W:':v:::-S:::::::-- ' Leo James Knight funeral services will be held Tuesday Jan. 7, at 12 noon in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel. Friends may call Monday evening from 6 to 8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to services. Interment will be in Provo City Cemetery. Sarah Elizabeth Adamson graveside services will be held in Provo City Cemetery at 3 p,m. Tuesday Jan. 7. Friends will assemble at the Mortuary until 2:50 p.m. Desig 79 Chenille Spreads Reg. 4.98 cotton chenille low, low price, Every lovely,, Easy-Car- e Full or twin. Assorted colors. Mortuary services Rodney Glen Olson funeral services will be held in the Berg Drawing Room in Orem Monday Jan. 6 at 2 p.m. Friends may call Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Monday prior to services. Interment will be Pleasant Grove, Cemetery. e Serofoam Toppers Give New Sleeping Comfort Regular 4.98 388 Check Sears low price Twin size, thick 1-i- n. otect your new . . . add comfort to your old mat asses with bouyant toppers. Slip resistant; they cling to your mattress. Re. Full size, 1-- 5.98 in. thick 4.88 P ull size, Iter. 2-i- n. 11.98 thick 9.88 Solid or Striped Cotron n. Vinyl Plastic Towels 99c Sears Price 25x50-ibath size in cotton. Avisco rayon blend. 2 for 99c Hand Towels . 4 for 99c .... Washcloths -- Sheep were first imported into America in 1609 in a shipment to Jamestown, Va., by the London Company. w . I " ' ..num. liyflHMiMWimapMMga 1 1887, 7, Aug. Ends (Continued from Page One) direct flights between Moscow and New York. Johnson also talked to Halaby about plans for development of a supersonic airliner. The super sonic transport project probably will not require major federal spending until after the 1965 fiscal year. For relaxation, Johnson; drove an automobile about his Mr. Knight Nov. 20. 1907 in the Salt Lake Temple She died Sept. 16, 1961. Mr. Knight attended schools in Orem and later, Brigham Young University. He made his home in Orem until 1917 when he moved to Burley where he owned and operated a dairy farm. In 1920 he returned to Provo where he was engaged in farming and the dairy busi ness. He went into the coal business in 1927. Mr. Knight owned and operated Right-Weig- h Coal Co. until his health brought about his retirement in May, three BROOKS VILLE , Fla. (UPI) Police Chief Bill Cobb conducted a traffic lecture for his men Friday and urged them to be especially diligent in enforcing the two-hodowntown parking limitation. Then he walked out side and found a ticket on his brightly marked police cruiser Cobb paid a $1 fine for parking hours in a two- He never married. hour zone. ur Knight- Leo James Knight, 76, 190 S. 200 W., Provo, died Friday evening in Central Utah Convales Harriet Winrow cence Hospital, Orem, of causes incident to a resident of NEPHI 1887 mi Leo Jamas ' Nophi Woman Dies at 83 In Juab Hospital dent Ex-Re- si " Mattress Covers Regular 1.27 1.98 resists mildew. with elastic corners. Full of twin sites. Waterproof, Easy-on- , at Sears and Save Sliop SEARS Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Mone) Back off 207 N. 1st WEST PROVO pen Every Friday and Monday 'TU I |