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Show Page 4—THE HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday, Nov“mber 28, 1971 Obituaries Goshen Man Orem at 85 ANNIE H. ALLEN Hilda Aston Rites Set OREM — Hilda Richins Aston 71, 827 E. 400 S., Orem, died Saturday at her homeof a heart ailment. She was born March22, Of Provo Dies at 89 1900 in Provo. the daughter of Funeral services for Annie Higgins Lindsay King Allen, 89, Provo, whodied Friday at a rest homein Provoafter a lingering illness,will be held Monday at 1 p.m, in the Teasdale Ward Chapel, in Wayne County. HILDA ASTON On Monday Annie Allen SAMUEL TROTTER Friends maycall tonight from 6 to 8 o'clock at the Berg Mor- William Frederick Richins and Amanda Carter. She married William Aston Dec. 5, 1916 in Provo. Mrs. Aston was a member of the Reorganized Churchof Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, where she worked as a women’s departmentleader and a Sunday School teacher. She received her education at the old Lincoln School in Provo and the Spencer School in Orem. After her marriage, she and her husband lived in Burley, Ida. and then they moved back to Provo in 1919. In 1937 they moved to Orem and had lived there since that time. Her hobbies were camping, fishing and other sports activities. Survivorsinclude her husband of Orem; sons, LaVer! W.Aston, and Eldon G, Aston, both of Riverside, Calif.; daughter, Mrs. Jesse (Thelma) De St. Jeor, Orem; 9 grandchildren; brothers, Ellis Richins, Ogden; Orville and Tharon Richins, both of Provo; sisters, Mrs. LaVell (Vera) Croft, Orem; Mrs. Duwane (Awilda) Ivie, Provo. Funera!services will be held at 11 a.m. Mondayin the Berg Drawing Room Chapelof Provo. Friends maycall Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m.ani prior to services Monday. Oificiating at the funeral rites will be Eugene Chaney of the Reorganized LDS Church. Burial will be in the Trotter. He married Maude tuary in Privo and Monday at Hansen, of Goshen, in 1913 in the family home in Teasalde pore They were later divorprior to services. Burial will be in the Teasdale Cemetery. “‘memberof the LDS Church, Mrs, Allen was born April 13, he served as a deputy sheriff in 1882, in Farmington, Utah, a Utah and Carbon Counties. He daughter of George and Martha was custodian for the Goshen Deseret Rice Higgins. She School for several years. He married Altheus Lindsay and he received several trophies for his died and then she married chess playing. Survivors include three sons Leland Kingandhe died on Aug. 12, 1929. She then married David and one daughter, Rene C. Allen andhedied on July 5, 1945. Trotter, Provo; Wayne T. Mrs, Allen received her early (Buzz) Trotter, Las Vegas; education in Farmington, then Stanley H. Trotter, Goshen; and moved with her parents to Mrs. Albert (Della) Hudson, Wyoming where she married Santaquin; one brother and one Mr.Lindsay.After his death, she sister, A.D. (Dick) Trotter, married Mr. King and they lived Orem; and Mrs. Leslie (Cora) in Wyoming until 1907, when Olsen, Santaquin; 18 grandthey moved to Teasdale where children and 3i great grandae engaged in ranching until children, Funeralservices will be held leath. oie she married Mr. Allen, Mondayat 1 p.m. in the Goshen they lived in Myton, Utah, until Ward Chapel. Friends may call hedied in 1945, when she moved at the Rigby Mortuary, Payson, to Provo where she had since Sun. 7-9 p.m. and at the Goshen resided. Mrs.Allen was active in Ward prior to services. Burial the Relief Society, serving as will be in the Goshen City counselor for many years. She Cemetery. also served as ward choir leader in Teasdale. Provo City Cemetery. Survivors include seven daughters and two sons, Mrs. James (Lois) Oakley, West Los Angeles, Calif.; Mrs. Lawrence (Clea) Durfey, Teasdale; A.H. Lindsay, Mrs. Ta Andrus and Mrs. ude (Karon) Bingham, CLAWSON, Emery County — all of Provo; Mrs. Charles P. Funeral services will be held at 1 (Hilma) Dowling, Orem; Mrs. p.m. Mondayin the Ferron LDS Bart (LeAnna) Deuel, Mt. Ward Chapel for Calvin C. Pleasant; Fay E. King, both of Jensen, 83, Clawson, who has a San Gabriel, Calif.; 38 grand- daughter and brother living in children; 85 great- Utah County. He died of natural grandchildren; three great- causes Thursday in a Price greai-grandchildren; two hospital. brothers, George Higgins, He was born on Nov.25, 1888, Seraris, a. Clifford Higgins, in Ferron, Emery County, to Christian K. and Mary LudHUGH, ANDER°W viasen Jensen. He married Edith Osborne,Sept. 27, 1916,in Coue's korman “Every day, and in every the Manti LDS Temple and she way, I am becoming better died May 24, 1960. Heis survived by two sons and and better,” is a formula that had wide public follow- two daughters, Mrs. Keith ing when established around (Kenna) Prestwich, Mapleton; 1900 by French psychother- Max W.and DonC.Jensen, both apist Emile Coue, according Clawson, and Mrs.Ivan (Laver) to Encyclopaedia Britannica. Nielsen, Ferron; 13 grandchildren, 11 great grand- FAIRVIEW — Hugh Cheney = 10 = children, and two brothers and Anderson, 71, Fairview, diel ina two sisters, Irwin Jensen, Salt Lake City Hospital Friday. Pleasaut Grove; Floyd Jensen, He was born Jan. 5, 1900 in Ogden; Mrs. Louise Asay, Fairview, to John Anderson and Henderson, Nev., and Mrs. Mehitable Cheney Anderson. He SERVICES, Verda Hall, Hurricane. married Ella Gladys Barker Friends may call at Fausett Sept. 2, 1925 in the Manti LDS 373-1841 Mortuary today and Mondayat Ternple. the ward chapelon hour prior to He was a retited industrial Provo services. Burial will be in the arts teacher. He taught in Annie Allen Ferron Cemetery. Rexburg, Ida., Fairview and Funeralservices will be held Moroni; he was also a cabinet Monday at 2:00 p.m. in the maker and a social case worker Teasdale Ward Chapel. for 11 years. Friends may call Sunday At the timeofhis death he was evening at the Berg Mortuary a High Priest in the LDS Church in Provo and Mondayat the and an officiator in the Manti family homein Teasdaleprior Temple. He had been a ward to the services. Intermentwill clerk and served many yearsin be in the Teasdale Cemetery. SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — Boy Scout work. Funeral arrar.gements are to be Survivorsinclude his widow of Hilda Richins Aston announced for Arthur Price, 97, Services at Berg Drawing an LDS Church architect for 50 Fairview; four sons; dauguter, Room Chapel Monday, Nov. years, He died Thursday in Cal- Robert H. Anderson, Orem;Orin %, 1971 at 11 am. Friends ifornia at the home of a daugh- D. Anderson, Ogden; John C. Anderson,Salt Lake City; Terry maycali Sunday from 6 to 8 ter, G. Anderson, Richfield; and and Monday prior to the Price, whose last major pro- Mrs. Leon (Florine) Nielsen, services, ject was the Oakland Temple Fairview; 20 grandchildren; which he supervised to comple- sister, Mrs. Hugh (Flossie) Quinn Nuttall Services will be graveside at tion at the age of 90, directed Brade, Virginia, Ida. Funeralservices are pending. Provo City Cemetery Monday or assisted in the planning and Nov. 29, 1971 at 10 am. construction of most of the temFriends may call at the ples of the Mormon Church. Mortuary prior to the serHe was also active in the vices, planning of the Ogden and Provo temples. Don C. Corbett Services are pending. Calvin Jensen Funeral Setin Ferron Chapel Orem Man’s Father Dies In Fairview BERG MORTUARY Arthur Price, Former LDS Architect Dies One-Day-Old Quinn Nuttall County ASCS Provo Angie C. Fisher Connell Funeralservices will be held Monday at 2:00 in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo, wherefriends maycall Sunday eveningfrom 6-8, and Monday prior to services, Interment Cemetery. Provo City Orem Calvin Cortez Hansen Funeral services were held yesterday in the Berg Mortuary at 11:00 a.m., with interment in the Orem City Cemetery. Office Has Price Forms NeboDistrict Orem Police Visits in Board Meet Arrest 2 Springville Dies in GOSHEN Samuel A. Trotter, 85, Goshen, died Thursdayof a heart attack in an Orem rest home. Born Nov, 3, 1686, in Greensubrg, La., he was a son of William T. and Irene Facundus Santa Claus Dies in SLC Quinn Nuttall, one-day-old son of David W.and SherryL. Young Nuttall of 1020 E. 375 N., Provo, died Saturday at Slated Tuesday PAYSON — Patrons and school personnel of the Nebo SPRINGVILLE — Santa Claus School District in Payson are dropped into Springville by invited to attend a meetingof the plane Fridayafternoon and was Nebo District Board of greeted by a record crowd of Education at the Payson Middle children and adults. School on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Santa was transported to In addition to the regular Springville by airplane, landing Board meetings on the second on the road in front of Springville Tuesday of each month, a High School, which had been meeting is held in one of the blocked off by police for the schools of the district by the occasion. Escorted by law en- Board of Education. These fo-cementofficers and fireman, meetings are rotated between the plane then taxied from the communities to provide an high school down to the opportunity for school patrons MemorialHall, where throngsof and personnel to discuss children awaited. questions on school programs Sania’: arrival touchesoff the with the superintendent and Christmas shopping season in school board. Springville, The new Christmas The December board meeting decorations are up, and the will be held at the Mapleton lights downtown and on the School on Dee. 14. The second community Christmastree were meetingwill not be held because turned onofficially to usher in of Christmas vacation. the holiday season. Merchants of the community are sponsoring special shopping promotions, with late store (Continued From Page1) hours. Jaycees were on hand at the Memorial Hall to aid Santa under the tree on Christmas Claus in distributing candy to all morning. Aim of the program is to see children who were on hand for that every child in the family or his arrival. families 12 years of age and under gets a present on Christmas morning. The greater aim is to see there is no (Continued From Page1) heartbreak on that day for any child who otherwise would have each, been overlooked by Santa Claus. These levels are a minute Many families have children fraction of those considered older than 12, and the program dangerous to human health, A has never drawn a hard and fast millirem isoneone-thousandth of age line. An older child can be arem, the unit used by scien- ae disappointed as a 12-yeariss to measure radiation in old. The Sub-For-Santa program is meNatural” or “background” aimed atthe children, radiation comes from radio- It is not a family welfare active materials in rocks and in program where gifts of food, the earth’s crust and from cos- clothing or fuel are necessary. mic rays from outer space, Butif a femily is in need and the someofwhich eventually reaches Sub has the means and the wish man through food, water and to do more, it is certainly atmosphere, Since cosmic rays permissable and a decision for are strongest at higheraltitudes, the Sub to make. But do notfeel the reportsaid, “natural” radia- you haveto outfit the family at tion levels are highest in moun- Christmastime. The aim is to tain regions. make the children happy. Do In addition to these natural that, and you vill have fulfilled sources, the study showed, each your role as a Sub-For-Santa. American absorbs an average yearly radiation dose of abort The Sub-For-Santa desk this 90 millions from radioactive year will be under the direction substances used in medical of Mrs. Carolyn Strong of the Heraldbusiness office. A call, by diagnosis and treatment, 4 more millirems from fallout of past ees or in person, to her will atmosphereic tests of nuclear bring the Sub a choice of a family or families with children weapons and “less than € millirem per person” f mn to the number, age, and sex preferred. nuclear powerplants, Assistant Fire Chief Hollis Alfred W. Klement Jr. of the Atomic Energy Commission, Johnson will again handle the for the fire who took partin the study, said program that while scientists must department, running the assume thatany radiation will errands, ironing out the bugs, andin general makingit go. cause “‘soreeffect” in man, the levels of natural radiation in the It's less than a month to United States “are certainly far Christmas. And Santa Claus, as below levels where you could always, needs a lot of help. see any effects” such as sickness Herald, Firemen State-by-State or genetic damage. India Urges (Continued From Page1) Indian attack in the Jessore area wasbattalion strength and ees by mortar, artillery or Ss ¥ Senior goverhment sources in New Delhi denied the Pakistani charges and said Indian troops may have penetrated a few miles in somesectors, but East Pakistani rebel guerrillas—the Mukti Bahini — were active further into the interior. At the sametime, the sources told UPI correspondent Robert Kaylor that Indian troops Friday had attacked two to three miles inside East Pakistan territory, near the town of Hilh in the northeastern sector of Dinajpur, about 190 miles north of Calcutta. They said it was the latest “self-defense strike” across the frontier. Mrs. Gandhi's message and Yahya’s Nov. 20 offer were described asthefirst exchange of messages between the two leaders since the start of the East Pakistan civil conflict eight months ago. Mrs. Gandhi's message was delivered orally at least two days ago by J. K. Atal, .ndia’s high commissioner to Pakistan, who returned to New Delhi Thursday from Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, Kaylor reported. The United States does not have an official flower, but the two flowers most often proposed are the American Beauty rose and the marigold. iN MEMORY GIVE FLOWERS After Theft OREM A 31-year-old Vermont man and a 17-year-ld youth were arrested by Orem police Friday night and accused of a “‘till-tap” robbery at Glovers Service Station, 1300 S. 1200 W., Orem, where$53 in hills were taken from the cash a egister. The man,identified as James Eli LaGrange, Montpelier, Vt., was held in the Orem Cityjail and the youth was confined in Utah County Juvenile Detention Homeafter both were identified in lineups bythe service station attendant, Mike Goi. Theywere arrested whentheir auto was stopped on I-15 at 1600 North after Mr. Goin notified police of the robbery The attendant reported two men cameto theservice station about 9:40 p.m. to get $1 worth of gas andaskfor anoil check. He Sid the older man wentinto the station while he was servicing the car. Mr. Goin explained he noticed the moaey missing from the cash register when he went to deposit the $1 for the gas. Orem police reported that LaGrange volunteered that the Montanalicense plates on the car werestolen and that the Ohio plates inside the auto were the correct ones. Police were not sure of the youth's home address. Nixon Dedicates (Continued From Page 1) last week in Miami Beach. “The President may be our first patient. He is going to have George Meany removed from his back,” Hope said. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, who spoke before Niyon, said Eisenhower loved the Palm Desert area and would have personally picked it as the site for his most imposing memorial. Nixon hailed Eisenhower, the man under whom he served as vice president and the only other Republican chief executive in almost four decades, as “a man of peace.” Nixon said Eisenhower was “a great leader in war ... the greatest in history,” but he added ‘as President of the United States, he ended a war and kept American out of war 10-YEAR-OLD Paula Hone of Pleasant Grove is the first week’s winner in the annual Pick-A-Present Contest, Paula Hone, Age 10, Wins Herald Contest A younggirl who's concern is for her motheris thefirst week’s winner of the annual Pick-APresentcontest. She is Paula Hone, 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loyd W. Hone, 319 E. State Road, TV. It comes from Ed’s Fur. niture and Appliance. I would like it for my mother because she haphlebitis andhasto lie in hed, and she doesn’t have anything to do except just lie there. Pleasant Grove. Paula’s winningletter is as follows: DearSir, I would like to have the Zenith twelve-inch portable Orem Seniors Sincerelyyours, Paula Hone, Age 10 Paula's mother has been confined with phlebitis for about three weeks, and must remain off her feet for long periods each dayuntil the condition improves, Slate Trip The Hones havethree children, including Pauia,the eldest, and a boy andgirl, ages seven and four. OREM — The Orem Senior Paula wins a $5 check and Citizens are scheduling a trip to automatically becomes a conSouthern California Dec. 30 for the annual Rose Parade and testantfor the grandprizeof §25, The $5 check was presented to Rose Bowl footba:: game. Anyone interested in taking her by Jerry Holmes, classified the tour may call Ivan Farn- ee director of The Daily worth at 225-3531 Herald. To Rose Bowl for eight years, That is a great legacy.” Orem Pound 8urglarized HAWAI | TOUR) *520 December 27th & January 17th Fully escorted to fourislands, OREM — City police are investigating a burglary at thecity dog pound where someone cut through the wirefenceto steal a United States warships dog. Police said the missing dog salute the President and im- is a female Brown Labrador. portant foreign visitors by firing their big guns, The In the 12th Century, an early guest’s standing determines form of tenniz was played from the numberof rounds fired. horseback. Noextras ... This price includesairline fare increase HONOLULU TOUR Merrill Christopherson Tour Director in December. Makeplans now! CHRISTOPHERSON “RED CARPET TRAVEL SERVICE” 292 N. UNIVERSITY, PROVO 373-5310 Annual Customer Appreciation Event! Sy SUNDAY ONLY NOVEMBER 28,1971 With quality at lowest possible prices, we try to show how much weappreci ate our customers the year ‘round However, at this time each year, right before the holiday season when extra savings mean most, we offer 10% OFF everything in the store. Our Annual Customer Appreciation Event. Primary Children’s Hospitalin Salt Lake Utah County Agricultural City of a hemorrhage. Stabilizatiua and Conservation Hewas born Fridayin Provo. Service (ASCS) has announced Survivors include his parents of that price commission forms Provo; brother, Todd Nuttall; PC-1R are now available at its grandparents, Mrs, Madge office for companies to report Nuttall of Provo and Mr. and wholesale and retail price Mrs. Dallas Young of Pleasant markups. Grove. J. Douglas Simkins, executive Graveside services will be director of the countyoffice, held at 10 a.m. Monday in the located at 90 West Ist North, Provo City Cemetery. Friends reported these forms will be may call Monday prior to serfurnished upon request. vices. ‘ ti we ae ROHBOCK SONS FLORAL 1042 South State - Crem 106 SPROUSE REITZ STO Fa OPEN TODAY 11:00 A.M. 350 Stores Throughout 10 Western States TILL 5:00 P.M. |