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Show THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1961 . Utah v County, Utah DAILY HERALD 4 Nellie May Perry Stock Mark et J. A. HOGIE AND COMPANY of New York Stock Exchanc BY FURNISHED Membr " Dow Jones Averagei: Total Volume 30 Thursday Open: 676.41 6.83 679.07 66 107,600 . 88,800 84,600 Am Tel Amer Motors..... 79,100 69,100 United Whelan. Lockheed ' Air . . . 61.800 . 54,100 Avnet Elec 52,900 Transition 49.500 Lionel 8 .' "28 '. 112.16 .147.42---- 65 112. 10-- :06 147.16- -6 21! 1 . . : . . Banner Silver Cardiff Central Std. . 17 '.. . Bristol 12043V4 38 20 1 .12 ' -- . 22.50 20 .50 ........ . .... 1.00 97 Va .04 1.00 ...... ..... .05 . ...... , , -- - ...... 35. . . . ...... ? , ..... . . S : . ...... . i a . 59 59 Phill Pete . . .. 158 157 Proct and Gam 56 57 RCA 51 52 Repub SteelB . . . 118 117 Reyn Tob 59 59 Sears 43 43 Socony Cal " 50 5012 Std Oil 45 4512 Std Oil NJ . 97 9712 Texaco Inc 4412 44 Thiokol ' 54 54 Timk R Bear 33 . 33 Transamer . . 41 41 Tri Con Corp 129 129 Un Carbide 33 Tin Pacific . 41 40 Unit Ar Ln 1 Unit Pk City 87 87 US Steel ... 35 35 Utah P and L 24 23 Wes Ar Ln . 43 43 Westg Elec .. .. OH , 4 70 Wool worth AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Thursday Quotations: Bid Asked 10 10 Bunk Hill 6 5 Day Mine 11 11J2 Kaiser Ind 34 Mtn Sts T and T. . 34'1 IV2 New Park 2 2 Rico Argentine' & 8 Utah Id Sugar COUNTER , - , . i . : OVER THE l 50 .46;- at at .49: 1000 .47 Utah Wyoming. 1000 at 70 Water Wonderland, 200 at .48; 100 at .47 West Alloy, 2000 at .02 Williston, 100 at .15 Zuma, 1000 at .05 MUTUAL FUNDS Wednesday's Quotations: 850 Affil Fund .. 330 Tiv Shares . . 15.17 Cdn. Gen Fund 1250 Chem Fund 12.17 H Bal Fund E and TT 13.65 anH W S,tk Fund Fund Investors ...... 11T 8.70 Inoorp Inv Mass Inv Trust ..... 14.72 Mass Inv Growth .... 16.41 Putman Fund 8.71 Telev and Elec 17-3- 21 5 , 853 3.62 16.40 1350 1301 14.60 11.15 9.41 15.91 18.76 174 9.49 Overseas . MacJi p Lake Temple. She was born in Indian terri- - her educa- pen." Private development may mit springing up of honky-tonk- s tion in the McMillan. School, She LDS the joined Coy, (Continued from Page One) the auction block and he "guessed" their sale would bring on 7 9.62 9.00 18.75 Alma Edward Parkin Wright, N. 500 W,, died at the Veterans Hospital in Salt Lake City Wednesday at 10:30 a. m., of leukemia. Mr. Wright was the owner and operator of Wright's Paint Center in Provo. He was "bom Oct. 10, 1897, at Ogden the son of Herbert Walter and A 1 be r t a 63, 1090 . . , 8 87. 8.25 17.50 . Corbett Found Guilty of Murder Of Adolph Coors j , ' v Mo. Mrs. Perry Church at 10 years of age. She came to Provo with her mother, brothers and sisters in 1907. Here she completed her education. She worked at Startup Ice, Cream Co. and for D. L. Van Wagenen at . his clothing store. She lived in Provo Since that time and had been an . active member of the LDS Church. She served as a ward Primary president and as a teacher in the - -- Primary. She was the secretary of the ward Relief. Society and also a visiting teacher. She had been a genealogy worker and as a temsang ple research worker She with the Pioneer Ward ' Singing Mothers and was very considerate of others, offering them a helping hand in many ways. She is survived by her husband, one son and two daughters, Chester M. Perry, and Mrs. Marvis (Faye) Anderson, both of Provo and Mrs. Ray M. (Golda) Heal all of Provo; nine grandchildren and two She is also survived by six brothers and one sister, Jesse C. Mitchell, William E. Mitchell, Clyde Mitchell, Roy J. Mitchell and John S. (Jack) Mitchell, all of Provo; Bert C. Mitchell, St. Anthony, Ida.; and Mrs. B. P. (Mary) Farrell; Middleton, Ida. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p. m., in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel with Bishop Arland Olsen of the Second Ward officiating.1 Friends may call at the mortuary Friday evening 6 to 8 p.m., and Saturday prior to services. Interment will be in" the Provo ' City Cemetery. n. Fire Damages City Truck . per- or of property and being entirely ; privately owned with no public- access, he said. In, totaling its park acreage the city should not include parks owned by the state or nation al forest; .these are set aside for more than local use, he pointed ' '. out. 7 Mr. Lynch advised that 'entire land development policy should recprovide for reation areas, with playgrounds no smaller than Vh acres and preferably 10 acres or so per 7 1000 population.. NRA Rule of Thumb NRA rule of thumb is that each area near an elementary, school should set aside for parks 2Vt acres per 1000 population. Thus a school serving population of 5000 would have a park (One Provo city block is four penny-arcade- s, - . pre-determin- ed the Ogden schools Mr. Wriht ' , ' Mr. Wright served in the 145th Field Artillery Battery B during World War I, which took him to France. During World War II he served in the Utah State Guard, and retired with the rank of colonel. He has served on the North Utah County Draft Board for many years.- He is a past commander of the American Legion. He was a member of the Timpanogos Knife and Fork Club and Provo Lions "Club. He was, active, in the LDS Church and served as a stake missionary in 7the Utah Stake for five years and for 2 years of the time he was the stake mission president. At the time of his death, Mr. Wright 'was a member of the Utah Stake High great-grandchildre- , Council. Mr. Wright married Martine Lewine Crane Dec. 30, 1919, at acres.) Farmington. The marriage was An area near a junior high later solemnized in the Manti school also calls for 2Vx acres per LDS Temple. 1000 population, but since a junior Surviving are his widow and 0 school serves one high normally son, Niles Crane Wright of to 20,000 population, its Salt Lake' City; four grandchilparks should comprise 25 to 50 dren; one brother, George Her-ro- d acres. of Ogden. In some communities, said Mr. Funeral services will be held Lynch, schools and city cooper- Saturday at 1:30 p. m., at the ate, with the school providing lo- Aura C. Hatch Mortuary chapel cation sites for recreatiojp, and with Bishop W."W. Sorenson of the parks and recreation depart- the Park Ward officiating. ment proving playgrounds main- Friends may call at the mortutenance. ary Friday from 6 to 8 p. m., The NRA planner said it Is cus- and Saturday prior to services. tomary to provide an golf Burial will be in the Provo City course per 50,000 people, which Cemetery. Provo does. But it might be desirable to The first State Forestry Commishave a pitch and putting or par-- 3 sion was created in California in course, for golfers who want a 1885, followed shortly by Colorado, short course instead of playing Ohio and New York. the full 18 holes. He noted adviseability of equip ping parks for recreation for all of the family, with, sandboxes for toddlers, swings for small fry, baseball diamonds, tennis courts, horse shoe pitching posts and picnic facilities. 12-ac- re Irish Playwright Fights for Life 10,-00- . - hospital. The writer's drinking ' spree landed him in a private hospital early this week, and reports from his doctor, wife and friends indicate he is on the brink of death. Behan's wife, Beatrice, who Tuesday feared he might die after two violent alcoholic seizures, said Wednesday her husband was latest ld "much better.". : Gertrude T. Horrocks Pneumonia Claims Eureka Woman at 63 Sister Of Publisher Dies Here EUREKA Mrs. Bridgie Harrington Webb, 68, died Tuesday at 11 p.m. in the Juab County Hospital of pneumonia. She was born Oct. 29, 1892, at Eureka, a daughter of Michael and Mary Goggin Harrington. g She was a resident of Eureka." She was educated at St. Patrick's, school at Eureka and was a member of St. Patrick's Catholic Church. She married Jack Webb. He died October, V Mrs. Gertrude Tackett. Hor- rbcks, 74, of Ogden, a sister of L B. Tackett, Daily Herald pub lisher, died at the Utah Valley Hospital, at 5:30 Thursday morn ing of a heart ailment.1 It Mrs. Horrocks, on a visit at the Tackett home, was stricken late Wednesday night. 15he was taken to the Utah Valley Hospital, where she passed "away this rj v;.ji 1 morning. $. , She was the widow of R. busi Horrocks, prominent Ogden nessman, whom she married in 1908. He died in 1949. She was born Feb. 4, 1887 in Ogden,' Ja daughter of L.l W. and Jessie Tackett.; J Survivors, are a f sister, Mrs. L. B. Spencer, Mlna, INev., her brofeer,r L. B. Tackett, Provo, and two grandchildren. i: Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1 p. m.: at the Lind-qui- st Mortuary, Washington Aye. and 34th, Ogden! Friends may call there Friday night from j 6 to 8 and Saturday prior to the ' i services. n life-lon- - N 1958. , She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Hazel Murphy of Butte, Mont., and three nieces.f Funeral services will be held Saturday at 10 ajn. at St. Patrick's Catholic Church., Holy Rosary will be Friday at 8 p.m. at the Keith Jolley Mortuary in Payson by Father Rudolph Daz, Friends may- call Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the mortuary and Saturday prior to services! Burial will be in Eureka City Cemetery. - t- ; - - Clearfield I, -. t !, and 208 officers. Five hundred ! prisoners of war were interned there. Last September 670 civilians Truclc were cut from the roster leaving it with only a few of its for No one was injured when a city mer duties. The buildings atthe irrigation department truck coland gave eight million square feet lided Wednesday at 4:37! p.s m. with m storage. a car at 700 E. 13th N., (Brigham Young private prop, v University WASHINGTON (UPI) A Pen- '! erty). tagon announcement that Clear Driver of the truck was Hiram field Naval Supply Depot in Utah Tangren, 68, 345 N. 2nd E., and of would be closed wasn't all bad the 1285 N. news . according to Sen. Wallace 50 E.car, LeRoy Barney, 20, F. Bennett, Bennett said he understood clos ure of the Benicia Arsenal in j In California would result in expari slon of Tooele Ordnance Depot. (Continued from Page One) l The Utah Republican said du ties handled by Benicia would be violations of the city building - ' transferred to the Utah depot and codes. to another California base. Damage to the structure was He said the transfer would mean estimated at $60,000. ;f i Fourth Batallion Chet Rprtan 1,000 additional jobs at Tooele by W. Mulcahy said the fire prob1964. v ' Bennett said ideal storage con ably started on the first floor ditions at Tooele' Ordnance ap stairwell in the middle of the parently prompted the Pentagon building, or in an unoccupied first to' consider the Utah base for floor apartment. Cause of the fire was unaeierminea. handling the Benicia facilities. Car City : h. Fire i j . j city-owne- . non-America- Employment -- rJ -- ' - Ly-- .Vw I 23 Inch overall diagonal 282 sq. In. viewing area - 5-3- . Utah Ratifies 23rd Amendmenl- Ma-ttri- el three-fourth- 1- LYT-AL- Calibrated Col or for beauty and harmony. Exceptional scrubbability fifiiYilf for long life and economy, Easy to apply. No painty J ' odor. ' A At) I - L ZJ- long-lif- e . . T"""vt rrrtot r-- Sr8cDcrjs S (ksxaco L. ' ' L.Z' j ' Zx? with TRADE NEW Wide KiMrh 1(W. ,ai SSw ' 111 than 21 sets No cut-of- f corners! NEW Flatter Tube Surface. Get sharper, undistorted pictures! Tinted optic niter cuts glare. Hut- T rrrnTtol FLOOR VARNISH Roll it on standing up or brush it. Looks beautiful and wears remarkably well. Easy to care for. Never needs Clear waxing. Gloss, Satin or Dull. Holds uma where vou want! Lighted channel Indicator! ' NEW Push-pu- ll Op-of- f. o j i !y . - 20,000 Volts of Picture Power. New transformer-powere- d horizontal chas-si- s Etched Circuitry. Eliminates 105 potential trou bte spots! Written Admiral on all Warranty etched circuit boards! gives sharper, 5-Y- ear i 1 brighter pictures . plus up to 38 more contrast! 1 Non-slipper- y. PEIRCE BRADY 17 o SALT LAKE 405 So. Main Affiliate of First Security Investment Co. Admiral Pioneered e)GJ C0 s 83 E. Center Provo. Ph. FR 3-80- 00 1690 SOUTH STATE OREM " ,1 The ADAMS Model CG24K133 console- in Modern ultra-sliNatural Walnut, Mahogany or Blonde Oak grained finish on ': hard board. I Angle 23" Picture. mora vie win cr area PrtsiJmt PROVO lit No. . .r - will 1 01 - ; ' -- m f s. EcbLEs (George v. Chtirmn Ihi Board mi U LOW PRICE ll r:-T7Z- 20 East -'- THIS AT enarael.either Gloss or Eggshell, in the same glamorous colors as New Lyt-aFlowing Flat.Brushet easily, flows smoothly. Chip-- mm - ' " rc'"': LOOK VITRALITE ENAMEL The h ' ! No One Hurt In Collision .of ll. (Continued from Page One) . Brendan (UPI) colorful Ireland's 38, play Behan,; wright,i was .fighting the- most serious battle of his life against the bottle today in a Toronto TORONTO . 18-ho- n; -- - McNamara said the most significant facilities to. be closed were the Army's Benicia, Calif., Arsenal, the Air Force's Presque Isle, Maine, base; the Army's St. d truck Fire damaged a Louis Ordnance Plant, and the The cries made by bats to direct Air Force's Hclingen, Tex., base used in road maintenance work them in flight vibrate' at 50,000 where navigation training is being Wednesday when a fuel line broke cycles per second, far above the and flames spread rapidly. Use of range of the human ear. stopped. At overseas bases, McNamara two fire extinguishers, owned by said 19,000 men would be affect- Ellery Grant, who lived near where the truck was parked, 1520 W. 500 A jury of ed. Of those, 15,000 are military DENVER (UPI) Send eight men and four women Wed mostly Air Force who will be re- N., kept th damage to about $100, to FLOWERS Provo Fire Departnesday found Joseph Corbett Jr. turned home over a long period. according ment. Dy The 4,000 civilians at overseas guilty of murdering wealthy brew WIRE er Adolh Coors III 13 months ago bases presumably are chiefly in a scheme to collect a $500,000 ransom. Four types of facilities were afAll the state's evidence was fected in today's announcement: circumstantial. The jury therefore Air Bases and training sta- (Continued from Page One) did not consider whether Corbett tions which have been made useUY " total. the 1960, $502,500 February, in Colorado's executed should be ROHBOCK SONS t less by changes in service mis- New home permits for 39 resigas chamber. manand of FLORAL weapons sions, dences for a total of $328,240 were But the first degree murder power types Februin strength. also this 1042 issued So. year State, Orem verdict carried a mandatory life Government-owne- d DIA' AC 20 perindustrial over an increase the ary, sentence. facilities no longer needed. None mits with value of $249,500 in the of these is currently in active same month last year. manufacturing. Overhaul and repair facilities being run at low capacity. Storage depots. McNamara said the. military has 50 millibn square feet of excess storage WASHINGTON Utah (UPI) space, most of it Army. He also is among 38 states which ratified said there soon will be 35 per the 23rd amendment to the U.S. cent excess capacity in Air Command depots. Constitution giving District of Columbia residents the right to vote Assistant Defense Secretary for president and vice president. Thomas Morris, who is in charge New vote among the of military installations, illusA L FLOWING FLAT several states was required to trated how the Pentagon hoped to give amendment the green light. soften the .blow to - communities. Distinctive Cons 'Freight . Deseret Pharm Equity Oil ....... NEPHI Andrew W. Thompson, 82, died Wednesday morning in Provo of causes incident to age. He was born in Denmark, Jan. 17, 1879, a son of Andrew and Christina Munk Thompson. He came to America at the age of six and married Anna V. Hansen of Spring City Dec. 17, 1903, in the Manti LDS Temple. She died in 1960. Mr. Thompson - was active in the LDS Church and civic affairs. He was a stockman and farmer in Emery and Sanpete counties. He moved to Nephi in .1956. J He is survived by eight daughters : Mrs. A. S, ( Eloise ) Bennion of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Lynn I. (Faye) Shepherd of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Robert (Hazel) Stoker of Sunnyside; Mrs. J. I E. (Vera)' Pickering of Ontario, Calif:; Mrs. S. J. (Eva) Coenen of Los Angeles Calif.; Mrs. Gordon (Beulah) Stanfield of Gardenia, Calif.; Mrs. Grant (Ruth) Draper of Moroni; Mrs. M. L. (Ida) Harmon of Nephi; 20 grandchildren and 12 Jhree sisters, Nina WilChristina . Bosen, both and liams of St. Helena, Calif., and Anna Edmunds of ' Spring City ; four brothers, Fred and James Thompson of Spring City; Tennus Thompson of Provo; J. C. Thompson of Ogden. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1 p. m., in the Spring! City LDS Ward chapel with Bishop Roger AUred officiating. Friends may call at the Anderson Funeral Home in Nephi Friday from 7 to 9 p. m. and at the chapel Saturday one hour prior to services. Burial will be in Spring City Cemetery. lake and river areas, rather than by the Frank family. "hap- Wright just letting development He received his " tory. in Oklaho ma antf received-: Nephi Man Dies at 82 Minnie Parkin. His parents died (Continued from Page One) when he was a small and "planning should set the pattern he wasboyraised for development of ''mountains, Riv-ergro- ve Bid Asked $50 million to $100 million. The 1050 9.50 will hold 67.87 V2 government presumably 65.75 facilities. .17 on to the other .15 5.37 437 California Arsenal Included 7.62 12 ... 1912 in the Salt great-grandchildre- s Albertsons Ariz Pub Ser Big Piney Bonanza Air Camp-bel- at National W. Milton . Perry on Aug. 22, .07 .06 1.05 Chief Con. . . . 45', .22 51 2 Silver 33 Clayton 5 .40. Cochise Eaitr . . 40Va ,.35 .20 52 1 Cons. Eureka . . . . 35 ' .05 . . ... .04 Croff . NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE .05 .04 . Wed. Thurs. Crown Point . . . . .45 .41 , Close Open Dragon 10 .08 04 4 Allied Chem 64 E.'- Crown Point v . .03 .03 East Std. 26 26 Allis Cham .18 .16 East Utah 36. Alum Ltd .15 .14 Bullion . 39 38 V, Eureka Amer Can , : 47 .05 ' .05 47 Empire Mines . . Amer Cyan . ; 14 ,10 ' .10 Eureka Lily Con. Amer Std . .37 . . . .33 60 60 V2 Eureka Std. Amer Smelt .05 04 Oreat Western . :i2o4 120 Amer T and T .24 . . .'. . .38 Kennebec 744 74 Amer Tob .05 .04 243, Atch T and S 24: Majestic Oil ... s, 1.40 46 150 New Park .45 Beth Steel .80 .77 34 3414 North Lily ... . Cater Trac .01 .02 44 North std. 443,8 Chrysler .04 j05 32V2 Park City Conw . Mtn. Fuel Sup .02 .03 86 867,8 Corn Pd Rfg" Prosper .15 .12V2 ,. 18 Silver King west . 19 Denver R G . .38 ,33 . 744 75 South Std. . . . . Dow Chem nil .50 .45 210 Swansea Con. . .., Du Pont ...... 1.30 155 114 113 Tintie Std. ...... East Kod .06 .06 27 27 West Toledo El . Paso . . t . . .15 .14 Williston 39 39 Firestone 32 SALES: 32 First America. Bullion Mon, 1000 at .06 79 ;79 Ford Motor 65 65V2 Cardiff. 200 at .a t Gen Elec . . 100 at 1.00 79 2 Chief-Cons- ., 79V2 Gen Foods . 46 18 Clayton Silver, 1000 at 53 45 Gen Mtr . . . at ,50 37 Cons. Eureka, 1 7800 37i2 Goodyear Pmum Trtint. 0OO at. .04 V 36 36 Gulf Oil 49 4&V2 East Std.. 4000 at .03; 334 at .03 Int Harv 66 66 Gen. Cont. corp.. i ax .w Nick Int 33 3312 Majestic Oil Mng., 3000 at .04 Int Paper ' 6912 Mono Kears., 3000 at .02 ; 6912 Johns Man 85 85 Mtn. Sts. Dev., 1000 at .04 Karanecott 83 83 North Lily, 100 at .80 Min Mnj? Ffg . 46 46 Monsan Chem Progress, 2000 at .03 3214 Prosper Oil Mng., 10,000 at .03 3214 Mont Ward 80 80 Natl Cash Reg Sage Oil, 200 at .30 86 14 Sundance Oil, 1000 at 53 86 Natl Steel 29 20 Swansea Con., 2000 at .44; 500 at Ny Cen RR 101 V2 .45 100 Pac G and" El 41 41 Tintic Std., 300 at 155 1.40 Parke Da 40 39 Unit Park City, 200 at J C Penney . . . 15 15 Utah N. - Mex. Gas, 500: at .45; 1800 Peran RR '. two-mon- th in Seneca, Oklahoma, a daugh- ried in Friday's Herald. RAT.T LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE of Jefferson Davis and Rosana ter !V. Wednesdays vuooauons: Mitchell. She married Bid Asked Robinson 8 STOCKS NYSE ACTIVE 158.50U 207s Avco Corp Studefo Pack . . Chock T Nuts . Utilitii Rails Woman, 67 MAPLETON Eugene Jay MorIn the Utah died about 60, gan, Valley Hospital today after a illness. He resided at 925 Nellie May Mitchell Perry! 67, 800 W. 63 S.,' in Mapleton, and had 469 N. 900 W., Provo, died this Stocks folconstruction worker and a been morning at her residence 228.41 1.16 lowing a long illness. carpenter. 1894, Feb. born was 25, She Full obituary details will be car228.81 40 15 20 Industrial! S.OOO n?.y ''' ' - Andrew W. Thompson Alma Wright Death Claims Dies 63 Long Illness at Claims Provo Mapleton Man Of Leukemia Eugene Jay Morgan PMOME AC 5-34- 20 |