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Show ay. October si, imi Utah Daily Herald Weather ru Roundup Obituaries Guy Farley Of Salem Succumbs SALEM - Guy Eugene Farley 3rd Salem, 66 S 190 W., Sr., died Thursday the Payson City Hospital 0 f complications following in a stroke. he was born March n Montrose, Colo., a son of John Wesley and Ada Leona Dixon Farley. 1 I 22, 1903 flt. Provoan's Father Rites Are Held DENVER, Colo. Funeral services were today in Denver, Colo., for LeGrand A. Carlston, 61, Denver, father of Carol Ann Carlston, Provo. Mr. Carlston died Tuesday In a Denver hospital following a heart attack. Burial was in the Denver City Cemetery. Charles Cox . Eureka Man Succumbs After Stroke - EUREKA Erlon R. (Dick) Bryson, 67, Eureka, died Wednesday evening in the Juab County Hospital in Nephi of complications following a stroke. He was born March 12, 1902, in Woodruff, a son of David and Louella Eastman Bryson. He married Irene Clayson Roberts on Aug. 5, 1930, in Provo. Mr. Bryson was a member of the IOOF Tintic Lodge, and was a retired night watchman. Surviving are his widow of Eureka; two sons and one daughter, Glen Roberts, Pay-soLavar Bryson, Genola, and Mrs. Shirley Blanchard, Osage. Minn.; 23 grandchildren, and seven great - grandchildren; his father of Payson, and four brothers and three sisters, Myrl Bryson and Otis Bryson, both of Payson; Mrs. Louella Kay, Santaquin; Mrs. Angie Retd. Provo; Etta Bryson, Salt Lake City, and Vern Bryson and Alvie Bryson, both of California. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Eureka LDS Ward Chapel with Bishop Ortho Christensen officiating. Friends may call at the Keith Jolley Mortuary in Payson Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. and at the ward chapel Tuesday prior to the services. Burial will be in the Eureka City Cemetery. GORD )N GREAT FIELDER L'PI KANSAS CITY, Mo Joe Gordon, Royals' field boss, shares or holds 10 world Series fielding records. Gordon played in 6 World Series as a member of the New York Yankees as t lows tonight 25 - 35. UTAH-IDAH- Succumbs Max. Min. Pep. In Hospital - ley etery -- TEMPERATURES OR EM Charles Rich Cox Mr. Farley Lorena Mang Sr., 61. 846 E. 800 S.. Orem, urn on Aug 18, 1950, in Provo. died Thursday in the Utah Val- Their marringe was later sol Hispital in Prc.i of emnized in the Manti LDS Temple. Mr. Farley was a member of the LDS Church, serving as an elder at the time of his death During his life time he had te sided in Salem, Spanish Fork and Goshen. He had received his education in Spanish Fork City Schools, and had later worked in the mines and as a sheep shearer. Prior to his retirement recent- Iuy, he was employed at Dug- way and Geneva Steel Company. Surviving are his widow of Salem; four sons and one daughter, Roy M. Farley, Salt Lake City; Robert 0. Farley, Perry, and Guy J. Farley Jr., Dixon C. Farley, Margie Farley and Sue Strozewski, all of Salem; 14 grandchildren; one Great grandchild, and two brothers and four sisters, Alvin Thorvald- son, Joel Thorvaldson and Malli Mischel, all of Santaquin; Ada Johnson, Provo; Florence Har rison, Spanish Fork, and Laura Tiffany, Granger. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. in the Salem LDS Ward Chapel with Bishop William Rust officiating Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary in Spanish Fork Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Mon day prior to services. Burial will be in the Salem City Cem 35 5; natural es. caus- 54 Burley Cedar C ty Goodin? Idaho Falls Lewis'on 56 53 48 59 Logan Ogden 51 Pocatel!? Provo Roosevilt 49 51 48 54 St. Georpe He was born Wendover Nov. 1, 1907, in Beaver, a son of Charles Rich and Evadna Med-roco- ft Cox. He Mr. Cox married Williams on Sept. 15, 27 23 40 35 from Page One) This Group Of Halloweeners To Be Treating s a Halloween Thorsten serving as well as 8 games during his - ear career as a second baseman for New York, Cleveland aid Detroit. All-St- i f NOTHING WOMAN FEEL MORE FEMININE THAN FLOWERS S. Viets (Continued from Page One) of in December, the defense Saigon will be turned over to :he South ietnamese. Headquarters reported gener ally light combat across the war zone from Thursday, the heaviest coming in the Central Highlands where a U.S. unit lost four killed and eig'.it wounded in battle with North Vietnamese troops who escaped apparently unseamed. MEMORIALS of BEAUTY PROVO FLORAL Ml V. 1st South 1 til cm ' S i to Freeway CO 4 700-- 1000-.2- 700-- Halloween Parties Planned were treated at the Utah Valley Hospital and released, ater their cars were involved in a collision at 800 South and 1300 East. Inv ere Neida R. Leifson, 15 mentary schools, Lehi Element- jured S. 1200 E., Mapleton, and Patary and Sego Lily Elementary, ricia C. Stewart, 255 N. 200 will begin their parties at 6 Fairview. E., p.m. All students at these schools and their families are invited to join In the festivities. Supper will be served at both schools, continuously, from 6 p.m. and will feature hot dogs, (UPI)-D- ow YORK hamburgers, drinks, popcorn NEW balls and brownies. Jones closing range of stock Games will be played In the averages: High Low Close various classrooms and each Stocks 854.28 839.82 850.51 school will have a fortune tell- 30 Indus 20 Rails 201.65 198.61 200.41 ing booth, fish ponds and cake 119.76 117.55 118.77 walk. Children have been asked 15 Utils 287.52 282.75 285.92 to bring white elephants to be 65 Stocks Net used as prizes in the bingo change: 30 Indus., up games. At the Lehi Elementary 2.7; 20 Rails, off 0.55; 15 a costume judging will name Utils., off 0.03; 65 Stocks, up winners in the prettiest ugliest. 0.13. spookiest, funniest, most origi Transactions in stocks used in nal and best character categor- averages Thursday: Industrials 891,700, Rails 175,200, Utilities ies. At both schools the parties 219,600, Total 1,286,500 Close Bonds Che, are under the direction of the 56.75 up 0.25 Rails PTA officers, chairmen and 10 2nd Rails 70.80 up 0.13 room mothers. 10 Utils 78.22 up 0.11 At the junior high school 10 Indus 79.45 ujch dances will be held in the afterDow Jones commodity noon on Friday for all students. tures Index average Sixth graders will hold their equals 100) closed at 143.53, up dance from 1 to 2 p.m. and the 0.15. seventh and eighthgraders will dance from 2 to 3 p.m. Punch PORTLAND Cash (UPI) and cookies will be served at grain, Coast delivery basi?: both dances by the PTA offic White wheat 1.45 ers. Soft white 1.45 White club 1.46 Annapolis, Md., was the first Hard red winter 1.65 peacetime capital of the United Oats no bid States. Barley 40.50 By Three Schools in Lehi Halloween parties LEHI have been planned by the two elementary and the junior high schools in Lehi. The two ele- - Thursday's Prominent Banker Dies Closing Prices Raymond Frank Walters, 68, retired vice president and general manager of Walker Bank in Price, died -w. s ww n Thnrsfiav a Salt Lake o f Hospital natural causes. 1 Two of his three childr- en j! Mr. Walters Walters Jr. Mrs. Wayne C. (Norma) Close and R a ymond F. reside in Provo. Mr. Walters was born July 15. in Salt Lake City, a son of Frank L. and Edith Haigh Walters. He married Ramcna Christensen Oct. 19, 1921 in the 1901 Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Walters became executive vice president of the First Nation-1- ! Bank of Price in 1953 and was elected president in 1954 and also served as chairman of the board. He retired in 1966 and held the position of chairman of the advisory board of Walker Bank until his death. Salt many positions of trust in the community and church. Survivors are his widow, two sons and a daughter, Ralph H. of Salt Lake City and Raymond F. Jr. and Mrs. Close of Provo; 13 grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Funeral services will be Monday noon at the North Carbon Stake Center. Friends may call Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Fausett Mortuary and Monday one hour prior to services at the Strke Center. Burial will be in the Price Cemetery. He held GUTTER LEAKS FIXED CHEAP Repub Tobacco Ryn Seaboard Air Sears Roe Stautfer Chem 41H 41 34' 4314 55' Std Oil of Cat Texas Gulf Textron Ine Tlnk R Bear 25 3V 3? 26'A 29 Transamerica TWA 2U 41H Cent Carbide of Cal Pacific United Airlines United Park U S Steel Ut Power and Lt West Alr lnet West Bancorp Westg Etec Woolworth C Twen Oil AMERICAN STOCK 32 3.114 41 0 39 17 17 43 6' 12' 12' W 77W 17 EXCHANGE Bid 50.00 '9 BO 42 35 3 25 Mary Jane Sorenson, Seattle. Washington, funeral services pending and will be announced by Olpin Family Mortuary. Signetics ic 3. Alpa Corporation 4. 300 acres of Ironton Property 5. Proposed shopping mall 6. Utah Technical College ONLY AN EXPERIENCED SOUND BUSINESSMAN CAN HELP PREVENT THIS TREND FROM CONTINUING. KEEP BUSINESS IN PROVO. HE HAS THE KNOW HOW TO BRING NEW BUSINESS TO PROVO. PROGRAMS FOR SENIOR CITIZENS AND AGED. USE OF YOUR TAX DOLLARS. HE HAS A PROGRAM TO RESOLVE THE CITY'S PARKING PROBLEMS. TUFHOTE and GLASS FABRIC ELECT A KNOW HOW & WILL DO CANDIDATE Tne permanent waterproof repair for seams broken solder joints noies or rusted areas. Easy to use BEESLEY Monument & Vault Company 725 S. Stote Ph. 374-058- 0 IMPERIAL PAINT Co. S3 East Center 373-800- 0 Provo, Ut. Ask 54.00 .20 .90 .45 .45 3 j0 8 PROVO HAS LOST OR IS LOSING HOW TO 77 17 14 FAMILY MORTUARY it costs you money. LA VORN SPARKS HAS THE KNOW By BOBBY ALLEN 31 MJjlpin When business leaves Provo Chart-a-mat- Photography i jr PICTURES OF How much have your TAXES REALLY raised this year? 2. Fun With Open 11 43' ' .... 17.78 19.43 27.09 29.61 6.95 7.61 8.62' .12VI 6.75 7.25 8.00 8.50 12.24 12.45 7.99 8.73 13.09 14 31 15.95 17.43 14.71 16 06 11.96 1307 12.27 13.41 10.55 f.d5 41 1 MR. PROVO PROPERTY OWNER 1. 32 55 38 33 28'4 EXCHANGE Close Banner Mng Bristol Silver Bullion Exp Bullion Mon Champion Silver Chief Con 45 20 28'A 4114 314 TWA Warrants Ut Ida Sua LAKE STOCK '4 55 31 Alrwest Day Mines Deseret Pharm Res Federal New Park Drua Skaggs Syntex SALT 427 71 Studebak-Worr- Un Un Un Fidelity Fund Fidelity Trend Financial Dynamics 71 '4 Financial Ventures 34' 46'4 Fletcher Fund Fletcher Cap Fund 55 Fundamental Inv 25 Manhattan 30 Mass Inv Growth 32' Mass Inv Trust 26 Putnam 28' Putnam Growth 21' Wellington Fund 40 Windsor Fund 42 45,4 204 HE HAS THE KNOW HOW FOR EFFICIENT Mortuary Services 500-2- 300-- HE WILL ASSIST IN BETTER 8 11 4500-.1- Berg Charles Rich Cox Sr., Orem. funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. in the Orem Nineteenth Ward Chape), 440 East 800 South. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Orem, 5O0 North State, Sunand day evening from Monday at the Ward Chapel one hour prior to services. Interment in the Orem City Cemetery. SO on-ra- 1 MAKES A ' - To Breakfast the t Bry-ioth- Legion Invites Hunters, Public spea-htadi- check-Dalrympl- e, ; Harold Cuzner Is the project for students, with Clark u, Lea'X ;"" 2 e) Lanell ?c 7 CO City-base- Miss 1 4 3ao-mi- ie church. investi-Levange- To Get Access Jen-ev- a switch. in the BYU Students Tenth Ward will visit a number of older people in in Provo tonight not to "tick" but to "treat." They'll carry with them baked candy, cookies, goods, etc., as presents to honor these people for their serviie to iommunity and jlnjureFive HUmbtn of New York Stock Exchange The report on the autopsy con-- , on, was substantiated by the; ducted on the body of Anne C. autopsy report which snowed: OREM Orem Police r, DOW JONES AVERAGES Miss Lavanger had prob- 20, Spanish Fork, JO Industrials K R Total Voiumt utilities j Voeks gated four injury accidents 12,fc0,000 850 512.17 ID0 41 Si 111 .03 215 Thursday 16 confirmed for what had ably ben dead 92'! the ficially days Thursday, two of them involving Friday 840 45 0 06 200 TiJ.3i-.- 42 285.971-- . been supposed by local law la being discovered. three cars' each. 40 forcement officers. The elrl was strangled with A young Orem woman was .'.'.'.'.'.'.'..'.'.'.'.. !i? coma cm auns coo 0 .23 I own her sweater and stockings I,1" clZ hospitalized The report was released Thursday night, 48 cam 326500 1.00 accident uh r comstock Tunnel Thursday afternoon by Dr, sieeve wnicn tne murderer nad following a three-ca- r 35 R,r i James T. Weston, Utah State left wrapped around her neck.; in which she was thrown from JfJS corn 30 on 27 .21 114,100 Utah Countv Sheriff Ralnh her vehicle at 800 Fast 1300 Miiite wter Medical Examiner, and showed ih Crotf 1.50 111a 91 ........ w'.soo that th? girl died of strangula- Chapp'e said this morning that South. Injured was Nancy 32 uragon 3i j Ess! Utah l 35 1.50 M.100 135 Init 3, fcmpire 22, 968 5. Main. tion, hid been sexually assault- his department has been .17 .30 6,200 30H 12 CbTcKa BUM .16 ed and had probably been dead ing leads every day and that his Orem Police said the accident vuiaaer in".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. tint curtitd Ll'y .52 1 men Iiave been working until occurred wheu her car was i"'00 "J since Oct. 10. StO I 40 1.20 Eurpua Goicond 12 25 1300 43 11,500 75 cwp Mis Levanger was the ob- me ear;y nours or me morning. sirucn Dy one anven Dy joAnn Gold C''3in 25 50 w ;M ' One such lead carried the in- - Cockerill, 22. 2204 W. 11800 S.,!T" 6 Sul .22 Goodeil Moor: 24 a of afGreat W?stern 17 ject .1 widespread search ve-'E The Riverton. york stock exchange Dalrymple vestigation as far as Napa, Horn Silvtr 3 s:' 3 75 ter she disappeared Oct. 10. Her Calif., where the OPn Health Induslries 4 58 4.6:'j police were hide skidded sideways, throw-jAC(wm oo Mammoth 00 body was found last Sunday in holding a man suspected of ing the driver out, then struck a Aim cim m idc " ,Wovi 125 the ghojt town of Silver City, N Park 12.00 which ;i,37' car at was a in the crime same theiricsLnMC(in parked committing 7' Nfw Quincy ....... 15 just southwest of Eureka. sh. North Lilly 10 manner as the one committed intersection. Driver of the third mr t ns 1.25 2?' Park Cons 23 City .25 was Lynn B. Hintoii, 24, 518 ZUn oii Physi-a- l Z 30i Park Premier evidence observed here. Ti;at lead, however, prov-jca- r io .15 65J4 Prince Cons at the time, such as indications ed to be another dead end. So E- - Center. P ov6 '8 V,d 304 Rico 1 50 100 Officers said the Cockenll car that the body had been rained the search continues. 4 , corB 5.25 Sarje Oil 5 62 Vj 41J Ol'k V.;nr-15 struck a fence after colliding 5lFrijiCor So. Standa'd ? 00 2 25 with the Dalrymple vehicle, then Dow Chm 72 7?J4 Stsnoaro M?ta.s 5 87 6 25 115' j " og ) ... II 50 also struck the Hinton car. ,uf,on,Koja( Tintic 773j V.'neral Rps 50 55 An Orem man suffered minor; Ei g "'. .'.'.'.'.'.'. Tintic Standard 25 ... 10 f 20th C: itjry 19 00 .... 16 00 wl 30' United Park injuries when his vehicle struck J 75 Dnm 6.50 City HP Utah Cons two parked cars and two of the 5n fle s,41 jj 82 ,lGen Foods '5 (Hi 35 vehicles caught fire. Injured igm Motorj 7sn Water Wonder l.sO 74, 1.85 i4n wiiiiston Basm 7.75 J The group that went to Salt was Alfred Thomas Lupus, 276,nd RYC 30' Triton Corp By FLORENCE ORGILL 2.62 2.87 34' Air The E. mr u Orem. accident! Center, A group of Mona Lake MO.NA City included, Mayor 32' SALT LAKE EXCHANGE FUNDS 31 W 31H men airng witn some JuaD Doyle Orgil, Councilmen Wells occurred at 660 E. 800 S., andjHia Mn9 Bullion Mon :030-- 49; 2900- - 45 20Vi ........ " to Jn5on cars ChiefCon Fred 27' J. belonged j 361 county officials, met with Gov. Ellertson and Vaughn MolyClayton Sil 44' 44 Comb Mete's Calvin L. Rampton, in Salt Lake neux: nrnsnectiw cnunc men. ndiisen 01 inai auureas ana lAJr- - Kenneeott V 40 40 Tm Ling A- CroH 5000- 28 ; 2000 .29 steele 508 Stadium Litton y 56' Ind 57',i Goodfll Monorail City, on Thursday to seek his Bill Sutherland and Evan ; 40H 40' I Gt Western McDonald Corp Dnve. re .lreJman in an; businessman, Ray Myers; help obtaining 28 McDornell iVk Health Industries 62W tne uidze. Min Mng Mffl 113 xunguiMiea to the prospective freeway that School principal Clark Newell Horn Silver j; 40' 40 Monsan Chm So Std on ntxu rtiuiui 00 io, rauisuu, the Calvin and Assistant Principal will by pass Mona, if 49 pres48 Marcor Sundance W. 400 S., Orem, suffered a com Mt States 23 23 Tin Min Res 500- - 52' ent plans are carried out. Neilsen Stake President Roscoe 291i Triton Mbu WA Sup Corp pound fracture of the left leg Ogden Fui 26' V Gov. Rampton stated he would Garrett- Corp Will Hoyt; when the Attorney 23 Olin he was IVh Mathieson MUTUAL bicycle riding Outboard Mar FUNDS do all he cou.d In helping, al28 28i and two county commissioners, collided with a car driven by Pac G and El Bid 34 34' Ask , though there seems to be little Affiliated Fund 8 85 14'i 14i Divd Richard S. Clark Jr., 17, 759 S. Pan Amr Air Alton Gadd and Golden 74 Shares on do 3 12 can state 4 official S8' 38'i Parke Davii any Dow Paulson i C Penney 710 Theory 34' 54 774 Sunny Lake, Orem. these matters. 14.97 27H Ortylus 136, Phil Pet iVt was taken to the Utah Valley Polaroid 10 93 11 95 13714 138'4 Eaton H Bal Corp Eaton H Stk 15.22 16 63 110 110' Proct Gam Hospital. 6 85 Enterprise Fund 67 41' 41' RCA Earlier In the day, two drivers 13 36 Fidelity Cap 13.51 39' 38'a Steel 3 off for Bangor, where there is a 1931, former military base used hv in Beaver. Their marriage was airlines for emergency refuel later solemnized in the Salt ing, several carloads of fol, Lake LDS Temple. Dolice airoort and citvy DOlice i i Mr. Cox received his educa- deployed nearby made no tion in Beaver City schools. Fol- motion to prevent tne departure lowing his marriage he and and watched as the jetliner his wife made their first home took off at 12:10 p.m. EST for in Beaver, moving to Pioche, the mgnt. Nev., in 1933. While there he Thus the hiiacker eluded worked as a miner, and in 1941, arrest at an airport where he moved to Summit City, Calif, authorities could marshal for where he worked on construc- midable but not security, tion with the Shasta Dam in enough to seize him without structural steel. risk to the crew members. John In 1948 Mr. Cox moved to F. Malone. head of the FBI for Orem, and he began working the New York area, was at the for the Utah Construction Com- scene and made the decision to pany. He later worked on struc- let the Boeing 707 go. tural steel at Geneva, in Lima, "We knew the ttuv was Peru; In Colorado at a gilson-it- e sincere," Malone said. plant, and at the Atomic It was learned that the Energy Commission plant in of the hijacker was Idaho, all under the direction of identity tne am. a stewarlo known He Utah Construction Company. dess who left the plane at retired in 1958. Active in the LDS Church, Denver said he had an look and a passenhe served as secretary for the he said appeared to be ger teachYMMIA and was a home He wore a nut". sort of "some er. He was a high priest at the a carried tunic, military time of his death. Mr. Cox wjs a member of survival kit of soup and staples, aooara in the Local 27 structural bridge and brought the ntie hidden under his coat. and ornamental Iron workers a case d crew The Kansas union. Donald 31, of Cook, Cant. were His hobbies were filing, New York, First Officer Wenzel hunting and horses. H. Williams, 26, Shallow Water, Surviving are his widow of Lloyd V. one Orem; four sons and daugh- Tex., Flight Engineer Mo., St. Charles, 32, ter, George William Cox, Mid- Hollrah, Coleman, hostess and Tracey Cox land. Tex.; Charles Rich Ohio. The Jr., Pleasant Grove; Carl Cox, 21. of Cincinnati, one stewardess of said hijacker and Kansas City, Mo., Jerry nave to Cox and Mrs. Jess (Grace Mar-len- the four aboard would York a as New to hostage go of Orem; Richmond, both 28 grandchildren, an one broth- and Miss Coleman volunteered, Charlene er and one sister, Jackson according to hostess Blaine Cox, Beaver, and Mrs. Del Monico wno lett ine piane ( Josephine) Shaw, at Denver. Bruno. Ida. Funeral services will be conat 2 p.m. In ducted Viond.---; the Orem 19th LDS Ward Chapel, 440 E. 800 S., Orem, with ofBishop Richard T. Hawkins at call Friends may ficiating. the Berg Mortuary of Orem, 500 N. State. Sunday from 6 to The Provo American Legion 8 p.m. and Monday at the ward will hold its regular "first Satchapel prior to the services. urday of the month" benefit Burial will be in the Orem breakfast tomorrow morning City Cemetery. and they'll begin at 5:30 for the benefit of pheasant hunters. Chairman I Carl Wilde says the Legion will serve breakfast from a.Ci to 10 a.m. at the Veterans Center 287 E. 100 N. The public Is invi'ed to join Legion-aire- s and Auxilary members. Here AND COMPANY FURNISHED BY GOODBOOY Mona Residents Ask Help Hijacked (Continued Stock Market Accidents - 25 49 28 34 28 30 22 50 0rem Four t - 71 j Murder Details By United Press International Provo Salt Lake City, Ogden, Logan: Generally fair today and tonight but with some high cloudiness; fair Saturday; a little warmer; highs both days 55 63' lows tonight 30-except Logan mid 20s; probability of measurable precipitation through Saturday near zero. Utah: Fair today, tonight and Saturday with some high clouds north portion today; a little warmer; highs both days 55-6- He married A utopsy Confirms YESTER-YEA- R To the college-ag- e group (and the younger ones too). If your parents had taken enough pictures of all the wacky things they did when they were in high school and college, I'll bet they wouldn't think the things you do were nearly as dippy es they seem to indicate. When we we"t to school they used to cut a "Y" In the hoys hair if they goofed off on "Y" day; live gold fish were on the menu; and did you ever see a raccoon coat r knickor a pair of plus-fou- ers ? There was a time when the boys wore corduroy pants to school and the mark of the "in" group was to let them get so dirty they would stand up alone. What if we had some pictures of some of these things ? Well, anyway, you can take plenty of pictures of the things that are going on now, and remember that one ingredient of an interesting picture is its age, so start your pictures aging by taking lots of them now. Some fellow sent us a picture the other day of my grandmother's home on East Center taken in 1901. There was a picket fence all around the yard, and the tree that is now seventy feet hicb (a black elm was about five feet tall. (whom I never knew) and one of her brothers and his wife were stnnriinc on the lawn by flic fence and the clothes they were wearing were unMievable. So take care of ynur negatives, because someday they will he as interesting as these I am talkinc; about. If the pictures were good in the first place they are more interesting later, but even bad pictures that are old are immensely fun to look at. Grandmother COME IN AND SEE US ELECT LaUorn G. SPARKS PROVO CITY COMMISSIONER PHOTO SUPPLI 24 N. UNIVERSITX, PROVO PHONE Fast, dependable photofinish- ing. Consultation Service. . 0 pol. ed pd. by Committee to Eled t, la Vorn G. Sparltt-Milt- on Hortvigstn, Chm. |