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Show DAILY HERALD Jiiliq Adalaide Afger Utah County, Utah Orem Woman Dies After Stock Market FURNISHED BY J. A. HOGLE AND COMPANY Member of New York Stock Exchange low Jones Long Illness Mrs. Julia -- Adalaide OREM rer&Kes Touti SO' Utah Obituaries i Sanderson Alger, Orem, died Utilities Stock aoS" at her home Saturday afternoon Saturday 7'15-0172.49 139; 144.06 .39 after a long illness. Monday Open .64' She was born on June 15, 1882, 733.58 3)1 172.84 143.67-i-.in Fair view, Sanpete County, to NYSE MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Wes Air Ln 59 58 CompJete Volume Close Chne. Westnibancorp William Henry and Elfleda Hurst 42 42 Control Data 160,300 95 6 West Elec ; . . . 37 38 Sanderson. She married Samuel Hiffh Volt En 153,000 48', Woolworth 72 71 Ford Motor 151,100 55 Ti Nelson Alger on June 27, 1906, US Steel 129.800 54' ,i AMERICAN STOCK EXCLANGE in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Chrysler 114,600 72 lVa Monday's Quotations Bid Askfd He died on Dec. Vartan. Assoc 94,500 22 . . . 4 Birdsboro 5, 1951. 4 l,iy2 Bunker Hill Fla East Cst 9 90,300 19 20 most She of her life in lived R W 85.000 54 Thomp Mine 5 5 i Day 1 Electron Spec 82.100 34 T4 Carbon and Emery Counties, Hecla Mng 20 Va 20 Brunswick 68300 13 Mtn St Tel 29 29 moving to Orem in 1952. She was Studebaker 73 68,300 New Park 4 4 ... 68,000 43 i Schering an active member! of the LDS Vs Va 56 56 Paddington la US Smelt 59.500 107'. Rico Argentine 2 2 3a Orem 18th Ward. She Church, Am Moh Fdy V 51,800 204 17 17 Technicolor Utah had .... been 13 14 Idaho Sugar president of the Relief NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE o the YWMIA, Society, president QUOTATIONS OVER THE COUNTER Bid Saturday Monday Monday's Quotations Asked anjd a teacher in Primary, Sunday Close Albertson's 19.00 Open 20.25 School, Relief Society and Allied Chem 51 V 20.00 21.00 5iy2 Aztec Oil .i 20 Rail 18 65 . 81, j 0 39 j - '2 t i Alias Cham Alum Ltd Amer Can Amer Cyan Amer Mach and Fdy Amer T and T Amer Tob Arizona P5 Atch T and S Beth Steel Brunswick Burlington Celanese Chrysler Denver and RG Dow Chem DuPont East Kod El Paso Ford Motor Gen Elec Gen Foods Gen Mtr Goodyear Gulf . . 173, 173,, 24 s, 46 . . 61 '4 123 a 24 Va 465 61 3t 20V4 123Ts 204 283 28,V , 33 29 32 Va i3y2 38 53 333,e 29 32 1334 37 'B 53 Va 72 V 723yi 21 59 2,1V 81 87 76 37 Oil Int Bus Mach Int Resist Johns Man 49a Kennecott Korvette Min Mug Mftf Monsan Chem Mont Ward Mtn Fuel Sup Olin Math NY Cen RR Pac G and El Parke Davis 74 33 63 Va 56 39 Va 3 55 39 42 42 22 33 42 42 22 34 31 JPhill Penney C Pete Polaroid Proct and Gam RCA Steel Republ Reveloh Tob Reyn Sears Socony Std Oil Cal Std Oil NJ Texaco Inc Thiokol Timk R Bear Transamer Tri Con Corp Un Carbide Un Pacific Unit Ar Ln Unit Pk City US Steel Utah P and I 31 46 46 205 80 206 80 55 73 42 45 41 96 72 68 71 72 21 66' 54 55 73 42 45 41 97 721'a 67 70 73 21 66 54 YWMIA. 68.25 8.75 2437 950 25.50 ; . . i S2 " Amy Mecham OREM Amy Mecham, 72, died Monday morning at a local rest home of natural causes. She was bom on Jan. 19, 1891, in Orem, a daughter of Amass and Lorana Boven Mecham. She is survived by several nieces and nephews in the Orem and Provo area. She never mar- ried. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Mortuary of Orem. Friends may call at the mortuary Wednesday from 7 to 9 and Thursday prior; to services. Interment will be in the Provo City Cemetery. 49 Vs 108 54 37 55 37 40 40 i By NEIL SHEEHAN United Press International SAIGON A student (UPI) mob battled more than 1,000 heavily - armed police and troops in a wild, throwing brawl at the Chu Van An Boys' High School here today. Students at the school slammed and barricaded its heavy gates about 8 a.m., shortly; before fist-swingin- g, rock-and-furnitu- re Provo Sees (Continued from Page One) classes Were to have begun, and began shouting anti - government slogans.', When police showed up, the students pelted them with rocks and bricks for nearly an hour before police got authorization to smash their way into the schoolyard. When police broke down the gates and swarmed into the yard, the students held them back for a time with a barrage of chairs, desks and stones. Police forced their way into the yard and began rounding up the rioters, wrenching their arms behind their back or in some cases dragging them by the hair as they rushed them to waiting but has installed the residula recorder required. In addition to its city water, trucks. Provo has a problem of bad Students who resisted were water in city parks in Provo Can- clubbed or kicked. yon above the chlorination staAn estimated 400 to 500 stution. dents were carted away to a deHealth Department tention camp in the second such has recommended installation of mass roundup in three days. The a station above number of stud ens in custody is Vivian Park at cost$of about believed to be well over 1,000. $1,000. As the rioting died away, a lone Approved culinary water is imsign in English on a second-floo- r perative for cities for both health balcony dramatized the students and economic reasons. against the government of Many diseases which can reach protest President; Ngo Dinh Diem. water-carrieepidemic proportions are "Help us," it read. "We are in Federal housing authorities re- danger." Earlier, the government had quire that a site be served by ap- hinted the U.S. Congress should proved culinary water to receive FHA loans. (However temporary investigate American officials and which it are "misapproval is possible if a-- city has agencies President says Kennedy about pending or provisional approval.) leading" conditions in South Viet Nam. City-Coun- n. Meat Plant d, j non-approv- ed j non-structu- Armed Bandits ral Hold Up Two Truck Drivers Kennecott Workers End Strike 2-D- two mail ay WorkMCGILL, Nev. (UPl) ers returned to their jobs late Sunday night at Kennecott Cop- per Corp.'s Ruth and McGill disworks, ending a three-da- y pute involving two Unions. The afternoon shift of workers began trickling in slowly about 9 p. m. Some of the workers involved in the walkout had reported Sun day morning and said they would return to work if the company met certain conditions. The spokesman for the company said it was impossible to meet their demands because the strike was a "wildcat." The walkout at the McGill Re duction Plant apparently sitem med from a dispute over a writ ten reprimand of an employe who the company claimed failed to comply with a job assignment. At Ruth, an employe said the men objected to the use of "un skilled" men operating cranes. The workers are members of and Smelter Work the Mine-Mi- ll ers Union, local 233, and the electrical workers union, local 279. Officials of the unions notified the firm they were negotiating to end the strike before the men began showing up for work Sunday night. eral health standards. set for construction, the community gets "pending" approval for its culinary water. When work is proceeding and be samples taken show water to not although uncontaminated the all items are completed city gets. "provisional must be approval. completed, Facilities and all Inspected and approved unconto be shown water samples a taminated before city gets "full approval" of its water system. sacks containing undefilm. veloped The robbery occurred on the loading docks of Wycoff Co., as truck drivers were preparing to leave the company warehouse about 1:20 a. m. The drivers, Al Meadowcroft, Salt Lake City, and Harold L. Child, Ogden, told officers they were approached by three men. one of them armed with a .30 caliber rifle and another carrying a .38 caliber pistol. The bandits asked for information about pickup times, delivery routes and the location of regis tered mail sacks, while the third took the sacks of film from the dispatch office. According to investigating offic ers the three boxes of drugs were being shipped from Rocky Mountain Wholesale Drug Company to drug stores in Kamas and Mor gan. They did not contain narco tic drugs. Officers said the bandits took the truck drivers' wallets and locked them in the back of a truck. Another employe found the men about 20 minutes later. A. FLOWERS ARE An 3-66- 68 OUR TRADITION OF SERVICE Our p r o u d e $ t tradition through the years has been that . of scrying you with understanding -- dignity and reverence. v I ALWAYS 85 East, 300 South FR 1 Appropriate 3? YO- U- f Gift r LET US SERVE P.rovo Floral i 201 wst Prove, 1st south FR 01 ! jgJ yTTw-- ? SjgJj? ?' y great- grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Amelia Ballard, Victor, Ida.; Mrs. Rosella Hone Peay and Mrs. James E. Pope, Lake Shore. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Lake Shore Ward with Bishop Bert Jr. Sperry. 1 He is survived by four sisters, Mrs. C. R. (Sadie) Tolley, Mabel and Reta Sperry and Mri. Alean Pace, Nephi. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Nephi Fourth Ward Chapel. Friends may call Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Anderson Funeral Home James Claims Life Of Man, 27 PLEASANT GROVE James D. (Jimmy) Bird, 27, 1080 N. 4th E. , Pleasant Grove, died Sunday afternoon in the Salt Lake LDS Hospital of a he art ailment. He was born Feb. 1, 1936, in Salina to Joseph E. and Zina Washburn Bird. ra He married Chesnut on Dec. 12, 1957, in ft $ Pleasant Grove. He was a Mr. Bird member of the LDS Church. He had worked as a Al-mi- tion." Grove-Monda- what you want scheduled. Army Mitchell, lives at 1598 Locust Ave., Provo, is one of more than , 75,000 armed forces personnel who.'p participated in Exercise SWIFT STRIKE HI, a U.S. Strike Command exercise in Georgia and North and South Carolina: To combat the rising costs of education, it's reported that many students do their own laundering in the washers and dryers d by college dormitories, or la local coin-olaundries. pro-ide- p Four Negroes were to enroll in four schools in the missile city and by 9:15 a.m three of the four had begun their classes. One Negro girl entered Rison Junior High in Huntsville. Answers To Little People's Puzzle Here are the a&nwers to today's Little People's Puzzle appearing on this page: 1. Fan. 2. Piano. 3, ACROSS Needle. 4. Compass. 7. Tree. 8 Basket. 1. Fountain. 2. ParaDOWN chute. 5. Skates. .6. Flowers. 14 BERG MORTUARY y? SERVIC1S j Eliza Ann Ilanks Moore Hawkins funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday evening from 6 to 8 and Tuesday prior to services. . Interment will be in the Salem City . Cemetery. 4 a cleaner. YOURi NUMBER only (br has ho?) $54' HOOVER SHAMPOO-POLISHE- R safe and easy way to The Gives your floors that handrubbed beautify your look. Also scrubs rugs. It Polishes and ie floor. scrubs too. $5488 $2495 HEADQUARTERS FOR HE'S GOT the easygoing Convertible City Cemetery. Olpin-Sundber- e, SPARTANBURG, S. C. PFC Kimball A. Burmingham, whose mother Mrs. Olive kl . v wiH be held a. m., in the funeral services Amy Mecham will be held Thursday at 11 a.m., in the Mortuary of Orem. Friends may call Wednesday from 7 to 9 p. m., and Thursday prior to services. Interment will be in Provo City Cemetery. (Continued from Page One) phy's High, the state's largest. Similar legal maneuvers were taking shape in Birmingham. Mrs. Viola Ayer, principal of the East Clinton School at Hunts ville, said the lone Negro boy scheduled to enter that school showed up this morning and began attending his second grade class. "Everything is Just perfectly Mrs. said Ayer. normal," '"There's not a trooper in sight." Wallace issued three executive orders before dawn barring inte gration in Birmingham, Tuskegee and Mobile. He made no mention of Hunts-villhowever, and the city said it would operate its schools as Provoan Takes Parti In Swift Strike III Nothing cleans your rugs as well as POLISHER-SCRUBBE- R Bird D. Showdown Convertible HOOV EEE1 funeral services Wednesday at 11 Pleasant Grove Third-Sixl- h Ward Chapel., friends may call at the Pleasant Grove Mortuary Tuesday from 7 to 9 p. m., ond Wednesday prior to services. Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove James ' - HOOVER offers more of in tnc mm The canister that t jTN. 0V jNrTZPPrA1UI?KSVN0tCArK (Steered CONSTELLATION 1 OSiS (Continued from Page One) from Kennedy that federal spending in future fiscal years would not be allowed to go above the current $98 billion level until the budget is balanced and shows a surplus. "A tax cut is highly desirable but only if the persistent and frightening increase in federal ex penditures is halted in its tracks," the former president said. "It is my conviction that any tax cut without this firm, halting of expenditure increase is un wise, undesirable and certain to damage our currency and the na Pleasant Grove -' rg Ike Opposes H fR . Heart Illness One Miner m 1 Ifin I5 1 1 D. Bird Olpin-Sundbe- coofffs t I 1 and Wednesday from 11 a.m. until time of services. Interment will be in the Vine Bluff Cemetery. Rites Set For Glenn G. Scott beneath the lumps of chalk and the steel and wooden supports that rained down the shaft. It took six big jacks nearly five hours to free Dockery's brok en body, and then it started its last ride up the shaft. When the bell at the winch tolled, about 100 persons waiting on the mountainside in the rugged Great Smokies rose in unison. Dockery's family had left in sor row when his body was sighted. The other victim of the cave in, Lewis L. Pope, 49, died early Sunday. The other three, Beauford Bryant and Beavers were in good condition, and Ray Stewart was in fair condition. All lived in Mur phy, about a mile from the mine in the extreme western corner of the state. t He was a member of the LDS Church. Hansen officiating. Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary Tues day from 7 to 9 p.m. and Wednes day at the Relief Society Room in grocery, clerk. He is survived by his widow, the Lake Shore Chapel prior to Pleasant Grove; parents "of Proservices. Interment will be in the two vo; daughters and one son, Spanish Fork Cemetery. Patricia, Gaila Jean and James Craig Bird, Pleasant Grove; six brothers and four sisters, DeRay Bird, Salt Lake; LaMar and Wel-do- n Bird, Springville; Dean Bird, Tooele; Calvin Bird and Mrs. Don SPANISH FORK Funeral (Avona) Gillman, Orem; Theon services lor Glenn G. Scott, 58, of Bird, Mrs. Bill (LaVee) Reeve Spanish Fork, will be held Tues and Mrs. Harold (Dorothy) Sar day at 1 p.m. in the Spanish Fork gent, Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Jos First-12t- h Ward Chapel. Mr. Scott eph (Marilyn) Nelson, American died of a heart ailment Saturday Fork; a grandmother, Mrs. Lydia noon in the Manti Temple. Bird, Orem. Friends may call at the Walker Funeral services will be held Mortuary tonight between 7 and 9 Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the and Iii3sday prior to services Third-Sixt- h Ward, directed by Interment will be in the Spanish Bishop Gean Fugal. Friends may Fork Cemetery. call at the Mor in Grove Pleasant tuary Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday prior to services. Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove City (Continued from Page One) Cemetery. Mortuary Olpin-Sund- K"1ACROSS and Ann Sophia Goldbrough $39 88 Minnie Oscarton funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p. m. in the Timpanogos Stake House. Friends may call ot the berg Mortuary In Pleasant evening from 7 to 9 and Tuesday prior to services. Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. ""-- yr 63, Olpin-Sundbe- rg Orem UTTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE NEPHI Donald Lamar Sperry, Nephi, died Saturday in the Juab County Hospital of natural causes. He was bom on Sept. 25, 1899 in Nephi to George Aaron Lake Shore Citizen, 82 Y . Ouu Chapel of A MemoRies Jep-pers- on Provo firemen were called out fires Sunday. They were called Sunday at 11:24 a.m. to a field fire at 2050 N. 750 E., where fruit trees and weeds were afire. They received a second call Sunday at 4:59 p.m. to 1650 North Canyon Road, where a sagebrush SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) and weeds fire had been started Three kids armed bandits wearing with matches and by playing white masks held up two truck fire crackers drivers early today and escaped with three cartons of drugs and ke When plans for modernization are approved by the state health department and a time schedule Effie Mae KAYSVILLE Milk Downgraded. High school students who demDairy milk from cows watered onstrated! against the government by less than approved water is Saturday and were arrested by downgraded on the market. carried placards hundreds the Interstate transportation can, such slogans as "U. S. under federal health laws, be bearing government helps Diem Do not stopped into an area with help Diem" and "Tell President water. The state can shut down eating Kennedy students do not like and drinking establishments with President Diem." Parents of the arrested stuunapproved water and the federal government, establishments dents voiced similar criticisms gathered outside serving interstate traffic, such as Sunday, They cafes serving buses, trains and the police stations where the teenagers were being held and mutaircraft passengers. anti - American bitter Over the Pst dozen years, tered saniremarks. Utah, increasingly aware: of tation problems created by urbanmade One new whisk broom ization of once farm areas, has really conducted intensive encourage- of tough poly sponge ment of modern sewage and water does "sveep clean." It picks up and holds lint fuzz, and dust on systems construction. Work in Progress Those dramatic patent-leatherlicontact; whisks powder and hair communfrom clothing; and even picks up Most of Utah County's vinyl swim suits are safely ities are in process of bringing pet hairs from upholstery and washable or sponge able with soap or detergent suds. their facilities up to state and fed- rugs. -- 969-17t- Webster, 64, Kaysville, OREM Fire struck the Ranch died Friday; funeral Tuesday, 1 Pride meat processing plant on Kaysville First Ward the Geneva Road for the third p.m., Chapel. time in less than a year when an Ethel PEOA, Summit County overheated chimney started a roof C. Marchant, 73, died Friday; fufire Saturday at 9 p.m. Damages neral Tuesday, 1 p.m. Peoa Ward were listed at $100. Chapel. Only last Monday afternoon an BRIGHAM CITY Mrs. Caro overheated boiler caught fire, lyn I. Burmeister, 71, died Friday; ruining $75 worth of meat and do- funeral rending. ing $10 worth of damage to the BOUNTIFUL Rudolph Jackbuilding. The plant suffered heav- son Barlow, 73, Huntington Park, ier losses last October when a Calif., died Sunday; funeral $7,500 fire did considerable dam- Thursday noon, Union Mortuary age to the building and contents. Chapel in Bountiful. on two Age LAKE SHORE George Elmer (Tel) Huff, 82, died Saturday in the Hughes Memorial Hospital in Spanish Fork of causes incident to age. He was born Aug. 5, 1881, hi Benjamin, a son of David L. and Amsiia Robinson Huff. He married Annie N. Westring on Oct. 22, 1902, in Benjamin. He received his education in the Lake Shore and Benjamin schools. He was employed as a miner at Castle Gate for a few years, and most of his lifetime he was a farmer and cattleman in Lake Shore. Clayton Jr., 76, 1394 S. 11th W., In 1952 he operated a fishing died Saturday; funeral Tuesday camp noon, 260 E. South Temple. Mrs. He wasatan Strawberry Reservoir. ardent sportsman and Reva Rankin Hammer, 64, 1160 E. loved to fish and hunt. He was a 13th S., died Saturday; funeral was held today. Mark Chipman member of the LDS Church. He also a member of the Lake Nicholson, 60, 1561 Westminster was Shore Irrigation and Drainage Co. WedAve., died Sunday; funeral He where he served as nesday, 2 p.m., 36 E. 7th S. Wil- was also a member secretary. Lake of the liam Henry Taylor, 74, 851 Gene- Shore Association Cattlemen's funeral see Ave., died Saturday; and the Farm Bureau. Tuesday noon, 26th Ward Chapel. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Eleanore Durkee Madsen, Lake Shore; three sons and four 54, former resident, died in Coos Delos and Darrell J. graveside daughters, Bay, Ore., Friday; Lake Shore; Theron C. Huff, services in Salt Lake City are Huff, Lander, Wyo.; Mrs. Wayne (Ver-pending. Mrs. Pacifica Rosse, 76, da) Gas sex, Payson; Mrs. Ray 550 Willard Ct., died Saturday; (Amelia) Ostler, Salt Lake; Mrs Requiem Mass Tuesday, 10 a.m., james E. (Florence) Lewis and St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Mrs. Lloyd (Elda) Horlacher, Span1030 W. 4th S. Esper Christian ish Fork; 30 grandchildren; 44 h E., died Sorensen, 86 , - Fire Hits ty sub-chlorinati- on died Friday; funeral Tuesday, 2 p.m., 260 E. South Temple. Mrs. Rose McGonifcle Ruebelmann, 73, 73 Elizabeth St., died Saturday; Rpauiem Mass Wednesday. 10:30 a.m., Cathedral of the Madeleine, 371 E. South Temple. James Bur-ri- s E., Davenport Jr., 45, 2877-9t- h towas held funeral died Friday; additional Lake City; day in Salt services Tuesday noon, Panguitch North Ward Chapel. Wlllard Fredrick Rasmussen. 80. Vernal, died Saturday; funeral was held today. Mrs. Ann Bohley Shatto McNeely Bishop Evans, 77, 937 Jewell Ave., died Saturday; funeral Thursday noon, Cannon First Ward Chapel. Charles Earl Denney, 66, 3050 Crescent Dr., died Friday; funeral Tuesday, 10 a.m., 260 E. South Temple. Newell Horace (Dick) 818-26-th rg Students Battle Police In Furious Saiqon Riot SALT LAKE CITY Archie 171 W. 2nd N., 73, Young Puymlre, Sunday; graveside services Tues1 p.m., Salt Lake City CemeFuneral services will be held day, Mrs. Mary Trump Warbur-ton- , Wednesday at 11 a.ni. in the Elmo tery. 90, died Sunday; funeral WedLDS Ward Chapel. Friends may 260 E. South Tem2 call tonight and Tuesday at the nesday, p.m., ple. Fausett-Etze- l Mortuary and at OGDEN Mrs. Mattie Byseit the Samuel Alger home WednesSt., died 88, Faulkner, day from 9 a.m. until time of Saturday, funeral was held today. services. Interment' will be in Oscar Lorenzo Williams, 61, died the Castle Dale Cemetery. Saturday; funeral was held today. Mrs. Mary Lilly MURRAY Simper, Dudley Papworth Wright 84, 77 W. 59th S., died Saturday; funeral Wednesday, 2 p.m., Murray 10th Ward Chapel. Milo T. Dyches, 75, 5416 Avalon Dr., died Sunday. great-grandchildre- Dies at 72 Olpin-Sundbe- 49 109 40 40 1 . j 38 Vs 49 459 Va 23 49 458 Va 23 Va 49 73 33 Vs 66.87 8.25 8.87 Va . Survivors include! two sons and two daughters, Afton D. Alger, 10.37. 1,1.25 Orem; Samuel Nelson Alger, Deseret Pharmac . 13.50 14.75 15.25 1635 Equity Oik Elmo, Emery County; Mrs. Federal Res 235 230 Charles M. (Z o 1 a) Larsen, First Sec Corp .. 47.75 49 50 First Sec Inv 835 9.00 Dragerton; Mrs. Kenneth P. Frontier Rofg .... 9.25 10.00 (Iris) Child, Weston, Ida.; one Frontier 63?, Cv Bd 102.00 107.00 Interstate ML 2135 22.75 brother and four sisters, Walter Lockhart 1430 1530 . Sanderson, Price? Mrs. Mary 3.75 Magna 4.25 Palomar 6.00 6.62V. Le'Roy, Salt Lake! City; Mrs. Pal 7S W Wts ... 115.00 115.00 Isabell Guymon, Palomar 6 -- 75 . . 115.00 115.00 Orange ville, Speedee Mart ... 7.12 637 Mrs. Emery County; Harriet 7.00 67 Alger, San Bruno, Calif.; Mrs. Utah Concrete .... 6.00 7.00 Rebecca Olsen, Van Nuys, Calif.; 19: grandchildren; 13 . . 18 56 V 81 88 Va 76 V 183 .... Browning Arms . Citizens Util B . Cons Freight .... . 59 246? 248 V lllVa HOVa 55 Bank of Amer Bonanza Air Tel' Huff Nephi Man Dies In Juab Hospital Claims George Elmer FILTERS AND ACCESSORIES MfltflU If the phone you use is listed under an6thers namt in the telephone directory, chances are you've been The remedy It missing some important calls. simple. Get your own name in the new directory by ordering a personalized listing. The low cost -- only 50 cents a month Includes your name, address, and the number of the phone you use. For quick action, just call our business office. 'HURRY! The new telephone directory goes to press soon. to put an advertisement in the Yellow Pages, call our business office and ask to have a Yellow Pages representative get In touch with you. If you plan MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE g t APPLIANCE s (3) Ca 0VI tttVICJ 120 N.UNIVERSITY AVE. TOV CAN BEPIN0 OH J 4 |