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Show Sunday Herald Sunday, November Provo Firemen Answer 2 Calls t Heart Attack Fatal for P. G. Man Wil-lai- rd out twice Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m. on a smoke investigation and at 3:30 p.m. on a false alarm to the BYU Fine Arts Building. The 3 p.m. call was to the P. E. Ashton Building 175 N. 1st W. to investigate reported smoke: Nothing was reported to be amiss by firemen. At 3:30 p.m. the firemen made a dash to the BYU campus but found that the alarm was touched off by workmen installing a sprinkler system in the Fine Arts Building. Ermq P. Colledge Death Claims Lehi Woman e j n, 11 Mrs. Erma Dean Peterson Colledge, 72, of Lehi, died Thursday evening at the home of a son in Pleasant Grove of Natural causes. She was bom Nov. 30, 1891 in Deseret, Millard County, a LEHI grandchildren; daughter of Christian and Mary great grandchild; on e Cox Peterson. She married LesWrenard Halliday, ter B. brother, Colledge on Dec. 16, 1908 American Fork. Ij 'in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Funeral services wl Jbe held He died Sept. 30, 1963. Monday at 11 a.m. in the Pleasant .Grove Fifth Ward Chapel, fiveSurviving are five sons and daughters, Lester J. and Friends may call Sunday from Christian Colledge, both of 7 to 9 p.m. at the Olpie Sund-ber- g Lehi; I v o r Colledge, Sunset; Mortuary at , Pleasant Harold Colledge, Kearns: Aimer Grove and Monday prior to serPleasant Grove; Mrs. vices also at the mortuary. In- Colledge, terment will be in the Pleasant Roy (Stella) .Walker, Salt Lake City; Mrs. L. R. (Irene) Dur Grove City Cemetery. rani, and Mrs. Robert (Leona) - . . . California Man Dies in Crash East of Kanab KANAB (UPIJS- A s- 38-year-- California man was kOled and his wife and four chHdren Mrs. Johanne .Nygaard Larsen, 66, h Ave., died Friday; funeral Tuesday, 1 p.m., Ensign Third LDS Ward Chapel. Mrs. Lucy Merrill Funk, 87, 1624 Laird Ave., died, Thursday; funeral pending. Mrs. Mary Susanna Heugly Wardell, 81, formerly of 2110 E. 3300 S., died 'Vednesday;' funeral was Saturday. Jose Luis Aberasturi, 37, 607-8t- Provo firemen were called Owen PLEASANT GROVE Halliday, 82, 67 S, 2nd E., Pleasant Grove, died Friday in the American Fork Hospital following a heart attack. He was. barn Aug. 25, 1882 in Pleasant Grove, a son of Henry and Mary Ellen Adamson . Halliday. He married Hannah Jane Bullock on June 10, 1908 in Provo. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake, LDS Temple. Mr. Halliday had been a farmer in the .Pleasant Grove area during; his entire life. He was a High Priest in the Pleasant-GrovFif th Ward at the time of his death. Surviving are his widow, Pisaisant Grove; three sons and two daughters, Mrs. Ella Jack-seReed and Eugene Halliday, .all of Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Reed (Rhea) Robinson. Ethiopia, Africa; Blaine Halliday, one Utah Obituaries SALT LAKE CITY Owen Halliday, 82 Boise,! Ida.; 29, 1964 Pebtigrew, both of Ogden: Bes sie Codledige. Los Angeles. Calif: Mrs. Paul (Rhonda) Walker, American Fork; one brother, urm Peterson, Lehi; two sis ters, Mrs. EUva Llovd. Salt Lake City; and Mrs. Mary Moss, fcearae, wash. Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. in the Wins? Mortuary Chapel. Friends may a I ji cam lonigni trom 7 to 9 at the nwrtuary and Monday nrinr services. Burial will be in the Lehi City Cemetery. 126 S. 1st W., died Wednesday; Requiem Mass Monday, 10 a.m.; Sacred Heart Church. M. J. (Jim) Shields, 83, 1631 S. West Temple, died Thursday; funeral Monday, 11 a.m., 574 E. 1st S. William ' Plaas, 65, 3728-9t- h E,, died Friday; funeral Monday, 11 a.m., Winder Fourth LDS Ward Chapel. John Hallman, 73, 414 University St., died Friday; funeral Monday m 1,000 Whites 1 : . i Speculation Page One) ed 28 traffic deaths and California 27. Illinois and Michigan had 16 deaths each and South Carolina listed 14. Alaska, Delaware, Montana, Vermont and Wyoming reported no traffic deaths during the holiday period. (NThe holiday period began at 6 p.m. local time , Wednesday and will end at midnight Sun- Two More Convicts Wendover day. ; d submarines or fishing boats, almost anything can be kept a secret. Near the end of World War II, in fact, one of history's secrets was enmost well-ketrusted, m part, to Wendover Air Base. It was here that a select group of men practiced bombing runs in the then-ne,V" I They were the 509th Air Squadron, whkh to August 1945 delivered the atomic bombs that ended the war.Wendover has been a quieter town since the air base was closed, in 1946, and 17,000 men were transferred out. But it's a town that never has been real- Captured By United Press International Two more of the seven convicts who tunneled out of Washington State Prison last Sunday were captured Friday with the help of watchful residents of Portland, Ore., and Garfield, Wash. An anonymous caller in Portland put police on the track of Neil Wallin, 28, and Donald Mesaros, 27, a convicted killer. Police converged on a downtown hotel and broke into the room of John Franks Jr. where the two escapees were hiding. Mesaros made a break and got ly quiet. away, but Wallen and Franks, Most of the businesses cafes who were charged with posses- and service stations on the sion of narcotics, were taken to Utah side and two casinos on jail. the Nevada side never close. Meanwhile, at the little town Few travelers ever pass through of Garfield, Arthur St. Peter, without stopping,, because it's 39, was arrested after an elder- 60 miles west to Wells, New, ly woman saw him sitting, .su- and 137 miles east to Salt Lake f spiciously, in a pickup truck. City. Whitman County Sheriff C. A. Truckers and tourists, crossHumphrey said St. Peter was ing the Great Salt Lake desert, taken without a struggle, al- have their eye on Wendover a though he had a loaded .22 long time before they get here. Luger automatic pistol on the For the gamblers, the seat beside him. plaster cowboy with his si y wink and mechanical arm that points 24 hours a day to the gaming tables, is a sign of the (Continued from Page One) promised land. Or he marks the tian life. last chance to leave Nevada Mariner-- 4 was first propelled "winners."; into an "aiming orbit" around A tojrist economy does not earth. About 40 minutes after make for stabiliiyuin a small blastoff, the Agena upper stage, town business fluctuates with acting as a flying launch plat- the seasons and people come form, rocketed the spacecraft and go. Many of the older resi on its journey to Mars tough- dents would like very much to est mission yet in U.S. space see a defense installation put history down here. A space agency spokesman One such citizen is Bob Sus-icminutes later said tracking re president of the T town ports from the Woomera, Aus- board. Leaning on the counter tralia station showed that the at his Western Cafe recently he spacecraft had enough speed to commented, "Well,; it'd be a escape the grasp of earth's great boom, and we're looking gravity and head toward Mars. forward to it." , It was announced an hour afhe continued, "f o r. ter the spectacular liftoff that "But," Mariner's sparkling solar panel years here they are always had unfolded as planned to con- proposing something or other vert energy from the sun to for Wendover, but nothing h a s yet. There's always power the craft on its journey happened been rumors, but nothing offiwill swoop within 7,000 to 10,000 pt I Police Quell . rv B-29- S.' - ; ' 40-fo- ot Mariner (Continued from Page One) election of a national assembly, now under consideration, would be accelerated and voted on in the near; future. While J shunning violence, the SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)- -A Buddhists . said they "cannot long range program for increasing Utah school revenue support a government which vm proposed Saturday by J.R. does not have any clear cut Mahoriey, ran economic special- national blan. It would harm ist !,at the University of Utah. our effort, and Dr. Mahoney recommended harm our national reconstruc ithe creation of a: Puiblic Lands tion." Fund in . an article published by Huong's regime "was charac the Utah Economic and Busi- terized as "a government which ness Review. He said that such does not listen to the aspiraa fund would be used to im- tions of the people, a governprove school standards beyond ment which wants to! seal up those provided for under the all the news concerning its re pressive actions against young present system. Mahoney also suggested that students, a government which the state claim title to the beds vutses injuries rxo memoers ot of its navigable lakes and its tne security forces." More militant comments came streams." "Then the state legis in remarks from Thich Tarn lature should establish exact boundaries and Droceed with the Ghau, powerful chairman of the administration of the land," said National; Buddhist Council's Secular Affairs Department. the research expert. "The Buddhist association He said there are over a mil will wait to see whether the lion acres of land underlying National Council and the High the state's navigable lakes and chief of state will take trifivp streams. action concerning the Tran Van The classification and apprai Huong government," he said. sal of the state's saline lands "If not, the Buddhists will," was urged by Mahoney. he added. He conceded that any "Enormous potential revenues further Buddhist action would are possible from these lands," be he said. For an example he cited the brines in the Great Salt Lake. "The present market program for "effective managevalue of these minerals exceeds ment and development of Utah's by 30 times the entire assessed public lands" and suggested valuation of all other property changes! in federal mining laws to permit mining of minerals in the State of Utah." He also called for a research without surface exposures. antl-Oommun- w -jv.:, , j "non-violent- ." , - 9 3gX5fiai3i3G (no fm smwm ? (mm (sSiliS? !rv cial.; We're just standing by." BOMB WORRIES FRANKFURT, .Germany, Former West German Defense Minister Franz-Josy planet. tour of Strauss said his the Far East convinced him Phoenix Ariz., contains about all Asia is living in the sha a dozen different kinds of dow" of the Communist Chinese date palms. atomic bomb. (UPI) ef . 180-da- ra. t . V Fury of Mob ' ist - h, miles of Mars next July 14. Its camera will peer through the thin; Martian atmosphere to snap 22 pictures while its scientific instruments try to unlock some of the secrets of the Viet Council Financing Plan Proposed radar-equippe- -- Two children were killed Sat urday5 and their mother critical Utah School (Continued from Page One) security. Out on the desert where there are no foreign I ly hurt when their car was hit by a Rock Island freight train at Pleasant Hill, Iowa. At West Allis, Wis., a holiday wedding reception ended abrupt ly Saturday when at least 11 of the 350 guests were rushed to a hospital for treatment for what was believed to have been carbon monoxide poisoning. noon, 33rd LDS Ward Chapel. An iron mine snatt cave - in OGDEN T. R. (Tom) near killed two Ironton, Hutchison, 38, died Thursday ; miners and' Mo., another. injured funeral Monday, 1 p.m., Mount In a 4 - months- Philadelphia Ogden LDS Stake Center. Katie old baby taken to a hospital Van Dyke, 67, died Thursday; Thanksgiving night died of mal funeral Monday, 3 p.m., Lind-qui- st nutrition Saturday. Elsewhere and Sons Colonial Chapel. in the city of Brotherly Love, Kamesaburo Suekawa, 79, died two brothers came to make a Thursday; funeral Wednesday, holiday call on a third and 7 p.m., Ogden Buddhist Church. found his skeleton on the second David Samuel Neville, 74, died floor of his locked house, where Thursday; funeral Monday, 11 it apparently, had lain for more a.m., Chapel of Flowers Mor- than a year. tuary. Mrs. Maude Bessie Roe The Navy Saturday identified Harvey, 67, died Friday; funer- 12 men killed Lin an Alaskan al in Green River, Wyo. Tome-sak- u plane crash. The severed bow Watanabe, 75, died Wed- of a Norwegian ship in which nesday; funeral Tuesday, 7:30 19 died in a Thanksgiving colli p.m:, Ogden Buddhist Church. sion was towed back into New LOGAN Millie Lowe Mer- York harbor. , rill, 85, died Wednesday; fun- includes previous eral was Saturday. BENNION .Thomas : Wil liam Rich, 91, died Thursday ; f'ueral Monday noon, Bennion (Continued from Page One) Ward Chapel, 6200 S. Redwood gentleness when .500 to 1.000 ;:: Rd. students smashed the windows. LAYTON-To- dd K. Kuroiwa, vainly tried to break through infant son of (Airman 1C Terry the Marine-guarde- d gates and T. and Beth Miya Kuroiwa, ripped the American eagle seal Layton, died Saturday in Ja off the front wall. Vellow stucco pan; funeral Monday, 3 p.m., At the v U. Sons S. Colonial Lindquist and Embassy the students Chapel, Ogden. splashed the walls with red, SANDY Funeral services green, black, blue and, purple for Kurt Hanson, 6, son of Dale ink. They turned on small trees and Claudia Brown Hanson, in front of trie embassy and who died Wednesday in an auto began uprooting- - them until po lice danced, their horses in and accident, were Saturday. made the youths retreat., COPPERTON LeRoy Pat While U. S. Marines backed terson Willis, 68, died Thurstrucks up to the gates day; funeral Monday, 1 p.m., to keep the mobs embassy out one grout) Copperton Ward Chapel. turned to a parked black sedan ST. GEORGE James El- belonging to New York Times roy Wulffenstein, 55, died Fri correspondent Henry Tanner. day; funeral Tuesday, 2 p.m., Three demonstrators climbed St.. George Second LDS Ward atop and did a war dance. Chapel. EPHRAIM Mrs. Hilda trees native to Only Christensen Armstrong, 85, Arizona palm are found in Palm died Friday; funeral Monday, in the Kofa MounCanyon, 1 p.m., Ephraim North LDS tains northwest of Phoenix. Ward Chapel. injured Saturday night in a one-crollover on U. S. Highway 89 in Kane County. Sheriff LaNard Johnson identified the victim as Phillip J. Hart, Sunnyvale, Calif. Johnson said Hart was driver of a car that ran off the shoulder of the (Continued from Page One) highway about 35 miles east of Kanab, went off a 20 foot em- Gbenye and his chief aides still bankment and threw him from were at l&ree and it was ho- lieved they might be reorganiz : tfie vehicle. The victim was crushed as ing meir forces. Tshombe was reoorted twa- the car rolled on him, the sherparing to fly to Paris for talks iff said. with President Charles de Gaulle before coins on to New York to attend the U.N. Gener- u1' Assemoiy session tnat opens from (Continued Page' One) (Continued from Page One) Tuesday. ' chev. The paratrooD rescue onera-- waving a sign reading: He wants strike-fre- e settle- tion officially ended "Yankee go to hell." Friday af ment of steel industry contract ter an estimated 1,800 The mob surrounded the whites negotiations that will not bring had been flown out of the revolt-tor-n black sedan of New York a rise in prices. f territory. American' planes Times correspondent Henry He e x p e c t s occasional were Three Africans ferrying the Belgians to Tanner. changes in the Cabinet biit Kamina in Katanga Province. climbed atop the American car hopes for reasonable continuity Latest reports estimated the and did a war dance. in sop posts. rescue mission "Fire! . . . fire!," the mob Feels "outraged" by the failed to save the lives of 96 began chanting. A moment lat slaughter of hostages by Congo white hostagesmost of them er the empty car was engulfed rebels and hopes those guilty victims of massacres in Stanley- in flames. A huge column of will be brought to justice. Paulis and Wamba. ville, black smoke spread over the Disclosed U.S. rlanea will The worst orgy of murderin broad Tschaikovsky Boulevard fly Belgian paratroopers out of which 28 whites died was dis in front of the embassy. tne uongo Saturday night. He covered Friday when white The Russian police must have said there was no alternative shock troops launched an attack had orders not to get tough but to use U.S. planes for the on rebel guerrillas on the left with the demonstrators. At first rescue operation to save "per- bank of the Congo River. they acted like parents watch thousands" of lives. , haps When the white assault force5 ing naughty children. But me Wearing a business suit, a drove across the river which mob got rough and the police departure from his customary runs through the! heart of Stan cat mad. cattleman costu me on the leyville they found the bodies I watched them begin shoving ranch, the President met with of 28 whites in a church. the demonstrators, harder ana newsmen for 40 minutes on the Five survivors of that massa- then harder. One policeman ;lawn in front of his ranchhouse. cre flown back to Leopoldville knocked down an African. It was his first press conference Friday night said rebels killed I saw the policeman kick the since Oct. 3, a month before the the 28 bv cutting then throats African, who jwas lying on me election, although he had an- and then mutilated the bodies. frozen ground. swered some newmen's quesOne of the survivors, Camille Then the mounted police gal tions on Oct. 19. Borry, said they bought their loped up. The mob crumbled. The President said the situa- lives by bribing! the rebels with Amazingly, I did not see any tion in South Viet Nam was beer. body get hurtj The only blood I "serious" but that woeful pre "We had a large stock of saw was a demonstrator with a dictions about the future of the beer and, incredibly, enough of bleeding hand. It must have United States actions there it saved us," Borry said. been cut by glass. had not materialized. Ambassador Taylor has said American air strikes against ar Auto Holiday (Continued from fJtW:llm-- t 1 u.b.-ueigi- an ! I Now Available to Everyone . SPECIAL NOTICE Communist Viet Cong supply lines and staging areas might help the South Vietnamese ' cause.! There has been speculation that the war would be expanded to Communist North d Viet Nam and porof tions, neighboring Laos. The President chided those who have predicted that a decision was in the on Viet Nam. making ' ' , New Office Hours For . . . Monday thrihFridiiy: 8 a.m. to 64km. 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